Difference between revisions of "Take use of virtualization"

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= Topics =
 
= Topics =
 +
* [[turn your physical computer into a virtual one]]
  
* [[turn your physical computer into a virtual one]]
+
= Find out which virtualization you run on =
 +
* for XEN:
 +
If /proc/xen/control_d exists, you run on XEN virtualization
  
 
= Solutions =
 
= Solutions =
  
* [[VMWare]]
 
* [[Virtualbox]]
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" border=1
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" border=1
! Solution !! max vCPUs !!
+
! Solution !! max vCPUs !! bridged networking possible !! Snapshot possible !! remarks
 
|-
 
|-
| [[KVM]] || ||
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| [[KVM]] || >= 8 || yes || no
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Virtualbox]] || 1 ||  
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| [[Virtualbox]] || >= 16 || yes || yes || easy to install and easy to use
 
|-
 
|-
| [[VMWare]] Server || 2 ||  
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| [[VMWare]] Player || 4 || yes || no ||
 
|-
 
|-
 
|}
 
|}
 
= Comparison =
 
 
* [[Virtualbox]] - easy to use and easy to install
 

Latest revision as of 12:20, 18 June 2012

Virtualization allows you to run several "seeming-as-if" (virtual) computers on one computer. This can help you

  • to work in several isolated VPN environments on one computer
  • to test several Linux distributions running at the same time on one computer
  • for developers, to test "dangerous" changes like on the login manager or the boot sector
  • in big companies, to take best use out of your computing resources

Topics

Find out which virtualization you run on

  • for XEN:

If /proc/xen/control_d exists, you run on XEN virtualization

Solutions

Solution max vCPUs bridged networking possible Snapshot possible remarks
KVM >= 8 yes no
Virtualbox >= 16 yes yes easy to install and easy to use
VMWare Player 4 yes no