OK, should probably put this to bed. I too do use some closed source stuff when I don't have a choice (hell, I ever run windows when I have to, under kvm though ). I do this virtualization (amoungst other things) as my day job.
At home I have two servers sitting in a rack that run KVM and host 6 to 7 machines each (some windows, some linux), on my laptop I have kvm and virtual box for the windows bits I need for my clients (makes development SO much easier).
In my data racks I have clustered KVM machines having tried, in order of pain, zen, openvz, vmware, eucalyptus, virtual box and kvm with libvert. VMware certainly has the nicest wrapper, but I think, from my testing, that KVM does just as good a job at the virtualization part, at a fraction of the cost, and its supporting an open source model. I know VMWare has a huge install base, but I'm afraid most of the setups I've seen (at clients) are simply put together by brain dead admins who have no clue (I'm NOT aiming that at anyone here, if your here you are CERTAINLY not in that category).
Feel free to use what ever does the job best for you (as is always the case). All I ask is that you look at the alternatives on both small and large scale. With things like open stack and eucalyptus coming along in leaps and bounds, vmware is going to have a run for its money, and that can only be good for all of us.
Have fun with it, its good stuff to play with.
Peter.
At home I have two servers sitting in a rack that run KVM and host 6 to 7 machines each (some windows, some linux), on my laptop I have kvm and virtual box for the windows bits I need for my clients (makes development SO much easier).
In my data racks I have clustered KVM machines having tried, in order of pain, zen, openvz, vmware, eucalyptus, virtual box and kvm with libvert. VMware certainly has the nicest wrapper, but I think, from my testing, that KVM does just as good a job at the virtualization part, at a fraction of the cost, and its supporting an open source model. I know VMWare has a huge install base, but I'm afraid most of the setups I've seen (at clients) are simply put together by brain dead admins who have no clue (I'm NOT aiming that at anyone here, if your here you are CERTAINLY not in that category).
Feel free to use what ever does the job best for you (as is always the case). All I ask is that you look at the alternatives on both small and large scale. With things like open stack and eucalyptus coming along in leaps and bounds, vmware is going to have a run for its money, and that can only be good for all of us.
Have fun with it, its good stuff to play with.
Peter.
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