Paul Archer
2007-Jun-02 12:20 UTC
> Subject: Re: [Xen-users] Automatic Loadbalancing via migration --live
> > You need to have some sort of tool that figures out when and where to > > move the guest, and that tool will use "xm migrate -live some-domain > > some-host". > > let me tell you, what i mean. On Februar i had a course on Vmware ESX > and i was very impressed how smooth let the system move the VMs via > VMotion to systems with a low load to balance the power on the network. > You have several options to choose, when Vmware let switch the hosts. > Vmware assign stars, from one, to five. If one VM hast nothing to to, it > has only one star, but if the load is higher and you get 3-5 stars, than > Vmware decide to move the VM to a better Host. > You have the choice, if Vmware does the VMotion automatically, or let > the admin do this. > > My hope was, that Xen can this too, but it seems, that i have to do a > lot, to get this feature under Xen. > > My testing system reside on a software ISCSI so all VMS can migrate all > ready without any problems :-) > > The next step would be to monitoring Xen and the hosts. Most software i > saw are not enough professional enough or need a specialist for > something like nagios. But, Xen is young so, i have to be patient ;-) > >While this list is primarily for "raw" Xen, I think it''s probably OK to mention Virtual Iron (www.virtualiron.com). They offer a Xen-based solution with live migration and load balancing for about $500/CPU. Since you''re looking at VMware ESX, I''m guessing it''s the price, more than the fact you have to pay, that''s keeping you away. Virtual Iron has its warts, and it only works with HVM, but it''ll do what you want. Paul PS I don''t work for them. I just evaluated their product (along with ESX and OpenVZ/Virtuozzo) recently. -- ---------- # pwd /loony/bin ---------- _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@lists.xensource.com http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users