Am 16.06.2015 um 18:50 schrieb Alessandro Baggi:> What do you think about Proxmox VE?Please don't top-post with fully quoting all previous content. This is a mailinglist. Proxmox VE is based on Debian. What does this have to do with CentOS? As it makes use of KVM you can run CentOS on top of it as a virtualization guest. Alexander
On Tue, Jun 16, 2015 at 11:06:20PM +0200, Alexander Dalloz wrote:> Am 16.06.2015 um 18:50 schrieb Alessandro Baggi: > >What do you think about Proxmox VE? > > Please don't top-post with fully quoting all previous content. This is a > mailinglist. > > Proxmox VE is based on Debian. What does this have to do with CentOS? As it > makes use of KVM you can run CentOS on top of it as a virtualization guest. > > Alexander > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centosProxmox is is debian based, but has a really good web based user interface. I use it to host my CentOS VMs and containers. I would be aware that it uses 2.6.32 and I have run into hardware issues. (Mainly issues realtek ethernet adapters, I suggest using Intel adapters) Rafeal
> > Please don't top-post with fully quoting all previous content. This is a > mailinglist. > > Proxmox VE is based on Debian. What does this have to do with CentOS? As > it makes use of KVM you can run CentOS on top of it as a virtualization > guest. > > Alexander > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > . >Also ESX(i) is not CentOS related but is included in this post. And what about oVirt?
On 06/17/2015 09:54 AM, Alessandro Baggi wrote:> Also ESX(i) is not CentOS related but is included in this post. > And what about oVirt?MMmmm, I really thought ESX was in some way a RHEL derivative but when reading http://www.v-front.de/2013/08/a-myth-busted-and-faq-esxi-is-not-based.html it is clearly not... Anyway, I learnt a new thing today ;-) oVirt, in my opinion, is a bit harder to implement: basic usage seems to require at least 2 servers, according to http://www.ovirt.org/Quick_Start_Guide#Prerequisites There is an oVirt mailing list where you can ask specific questions: http://www.ovirt.org/Mailing_lists I would add XenServer to the list, which is currently my favorite, BUT it misses a Linux management interface http://xenserver.org/overview-xenserver-open-source-virtualization/source-code.html (I let you read what is the upstream ;-) )