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    Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      What cool, new features are you finding?

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      • Deleted74295D
        Deleted74295 Banned @StrongBad
        last edited by

        @StrongBad said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

        Were you new to XS? What is your impression of XS vs. Hyper-V?

        XenServer performance is there, the tools to manage it are there but it almost feels like it needs some new testers on their dev team.

        i.e - My first time I deployed it, I accidentally chose the install media USB as the destination to install it, a minor detail but you'd have hoped they just program out an option like that as it is self destructive.

        Xen has it's place but in a system design for most SMBs I can't see where I would go to that over Hyper-V in Windows world or in a bigger shop, a hyper converged system.

        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
          last edited by

          @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

          Xen has it's place but in a system design for most SMBs I can't see where I would go to that over Hyper-V in Windows world

          Why Hyper-V in a Windows world? Talking to Windows Admins, they seem to be the most confused and struggle the most with Hyper-V of all solutions. I haven't used 2016, so don't know what they have done to improve things, but Hyper-V seems so hard, specifically for Windows admins in the real world, that that alone seems like the reason that XS would be a decent option.

          What do you feel makes Hyper-V specifically Windows friendly (without deploying it poorly, making it de facto a bad choice for Windows Admins because it encourages poorly designed deployments.)

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          • Deleted74295D
            Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said

            Why Hyper-V in a Windows world? Talking to Windows Admins, they seem to be the most confused and struggle the most with Hyper-V of all solutions. I haven't used 2016, so don't know what they have done to improve things, but Hyper-V seems so hard, specifically for Windows admins in the real world, that that alone seems like the reason that XS would be a decent option.

            If you can't cope with doing hyper-v well, you can't cope with XenServer, Yes you do get more toys immediately with XenServer but to use them properly you need that competence to use them safely.

            Again, in a larger environment where I would consider using Xen's features, I'm pushed towards a Scale system which is very different but actually better in the long run in a lot of set ups.

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            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
              last edited by

              @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

              If you can't cope with doing hyper-v well, you can't cope with XenServer, Yes you do get more toys immediately with XenServer but to use them properly you need that competence to use them safely.

              I don't know if I agree. Installing XS well takes, like, zero effort. Take any decent commodity server, pop in the CD, it takes care of itself. It's done well (enough at least) out of the box.

              Hyper-V is nothing like that. You will, by default, be led down all kinds of bad and confusing routes. You can do XS well long before you can even figure out how to acquire Hyper-V.

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              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                last edited by

                @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                Again, in a larger environment where I would consider using Xen's features, I'm pushed towards a Scale system which is very different but actually better in the long run in a lot of set ups.

                Sure, once we get past the one or two node systems where XS and Hyper-V really play well. But when it is just one host and you don't want something crazy, I think XS, from what I've seen, is dramatically easier for someone in the Windows world to not mess up. Hyper-V encourages licensing problems, total confusion as to what is running, more licensing overhead confusion that it takes effort to run XS at all, unreliable or untested software RAID, direct GUI management and more. None of which is required, it's mostly ecosystem problems, but those items make me feel that "for Windows admins", XS is specifically a better bet.

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                • Deleted74295D
                  Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  @scottalanmiller said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                  @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                  If you can't cope with doing hyper-v well, you can't cope with XenServer, Yes you do get more toys immediately with XenServer but to use them properly you need that competence to use them safely.

                  I don't know if I agree. Installing XS well takes, like, zero effort. Take any decent commodity server, pop in the CD, it takes care of itself. It's done well (enough at least) out of the box.

                  Hyper-V is nothing like that. You will, by default, be led down all kinds of bad and confusing routes. You can do XS well long before you can even figure out how to acquire Hyper-V.

                  I literally built a brand new server in full disaster mode at 2am, the crucial time when I am bound to make mistakes, Hyper-V, 2 server VMs, all done nicely to a standard but most of the work was the guest VMs, the hypervisor was simple. Whether that's XS/ESXI/Hyper-v, they are almost apples to apples for installing, I mean maybe for fun we should line up a tech with the same hardware, video record time trial him installing each hypervisor.

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                    last edited by

                    @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                    @Breffni-Potter said in Lab/Demo/Training Server, Refurb:

                    If you can't cope with doing hyper-v well, you can't cope with XenServer, Yes you do get more toys immediately with XenServer but to use them properly you need that competence to use them safely.

                    I don't know if I agree. Installing XS well takes, like, zero effort. Take any decent commodity server, pop in the CD, it takes care of itself. It's done well (enough at least) out of the box.

                    Hyper-V is nothing like that. You will, by default, be led down all kinds of bad and confusing routes. You can do XS well long before you can even figure out how to acquire Hyper-V.

                    I literally built a brand new server in full disaster mode at 2am, the crucial time when I am bound to make mistakes, Hyper-V, 2 server VMs, all done nicely to a standard but most of the work was the guest VMs, the hypervisor was simple. Whether that's XS/ESXI/Hyper-v, they are almost apples to apples for installing, I mean maybe for fun we should line up a tech with the same hardware, video record time trial him installing each hypervisor.

                    Maybe the problem is that people who know choose XS and people who are confused chose HV? At one time, @John-Nicholson and I watched for like a year on SW and every single (literally EVERY single) mention of HV was because the person deploying it was confused and thought that they had to or were deploying something else or didn't know how it got there or thought that it gave them something that it did not. Every, single, one.

                    It might be the confusion leading people to HV, which then causes them to be confused about how to use it.

                    That you can use it well, already knowing how virtualization works, isn't relevant to the normal Windows world and isn't indicative in any way.

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