A. W. Wright wrote: > Thomas Cameron wrote: >> A. W. Wright wrote: >> >> >>> Is it worth it to keep hosted applications in a Virtual Machine? We >>> tried Xen, but it seems to crash the server, I don't know if it has >>> anything to do with the processor not supporting native virtualization. >>> What VM software would you recommend, or are there any good >>> articles/books to read? >>> >> I host several customers using Xen on RHEL 5. Solid as a rock and very >> fast. No hardware enabled VT, just paravirt. What distro were you >> using that crashed? >> > Installed is Debian etch with backports. Maybe not the best idea to use > backports.org for production applications? > > Additionally, I keep a mirror of the server for testing on a virtual > machine, and it didn't like Xen at all, it ran very slow, taking 10 > minutes to boot. I remembered, virtual machines on virtual machines > don't work very well. Wow. That's been the exact opposite of my experience in RHEL. Xen is lightning fast, especially if you install the guest OS to a raw partition (i.e. /dev/sdb1) or to an LVM slice (i.e. /dev/mapper/XenVol-Node01). It's silly fast, quick to install guests, and easy as all get-out to spin up guests as needed. -- TC --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss