Difference between revisions of "Take use of virtualization"
From Linuxintro
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− | ! Solution !! max vCPUs !! Snapshot possible !! remarks | + | ! Solution !! max vCPUs !! bridged networking possible !! Snapshot possible !! remarks |
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− | | [[KVM]] || >= 8 || no | + | | [[KVM]] || >= 8 || yes || no |
|- | |- | ||
− | | [[Virtualbox]] || | + | | [[Virtualbox]] || >= 16 || yes || yes || easy to install and easy to use |
|- | |- | ||
− | | [[VMWare]] Server || 2 || yes || | + | | [[VMWare]] Server || 2 || yes || yes || |
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|} | |} |
Revision as of 17:26, 15 January 2011
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
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 Server | 2 | yes | yes |