• Xepher
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    4710 months ago

    The list for those that don’t want to read the whole article:

    1. Proxmox
    2. XCP-ng
    3. OpenNebula
    4. SUSE Harvester
    5. Oracle VM VirtualBox
    • Davel23
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      1610 months ago

      I like Virtualbox, use it myself in several instances but I would never consider it a replacement for VMware.

      • @ikidd
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        610 months ago

        Virtualbox is painfully non-performant compared to anything KVM based.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        I use VirtualBox right now. My daily driver windows 10 guest is so slow, that pushing the start button comes with a 20s wait. Looking at the performance monitor while this is happening, nothing pops outs as the culprit. Plenty of resources left.

        I’ve always sworn to VirtualBox, but I’m going to ask my boss for a workstation pro license next time I see him.

    • Dyskolos
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      910 months ago

      Thanks, but… Wow, who would’ve thought it’s the other major contenders.

        • @kylian0087
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          110 months ago

          Ahh I didnt know that honnestly. never really used proxmox my self. thought it was its own thing. I do know that openstack ussage it as well.

    • @[email protected]
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      210 months ago

      I can relly recommend proxmox. Some years ago we switched from a 60.000€ dell VMWare Storage/Server-Setup to a three Host proxmox Setup for about half the price (to be fair, add 5-10k for Setup for our local Linux Team because we did not know much about proxmox). Mainly because we were able to place one of the Hosts in our Warehouse (connected with 10g Fiber) so there theoretically will be no harm to our production in case of water/fire/whatever in the server room because the one system can instantly take over (after some learning it works Like a Charm). I had some concerns regarding ceph, but for us it has proven Rocksolid, even while we had some real weird Switch issues it always recovered fast and without issues as soon as the connection was there. A big issue were the licensing terms for Microsoft products because with three amd-systems you have a lot of cores to buy licenses for - so we had a good excuse to substitute and cut out some products that only supported Windows environments.