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    Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @magicmarker
      last edited by

      @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

      @dustinb3403 Oh wow, I was not aware of the 2TB virtual HDD limit with XenServer. I will be looking into a new Hypervisor for this. Thanks for the heads up! I like XenServer and ESXi. I personally didn't like working with Hyper-V and it was annoying that it had to be integrated with Active Directory.

      Hyper-V has no dependency on Active Directory. While we could discuss the merits of using or avoiding AD, tons of people believe that Hyper-V should not be connected to AD, so using it that way is extremely popular.

      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

        tons of people believe that Hyper-V should not be connected to AD, so using it that way is extremely popular.

        We have a thread somewhere stating why that is a silly thing to do if they already have AD. Obviously if there is no AD, that is fine.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • DustinB3403D
          DustinB3403 @magicmarker
          last edited by DustinB3403

          @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

          @dustinb3403 Oh wow, I was not aware of the 2TB virtual HDD limit with XenServer. I will be looking into a new Hypervisor for this. Thanks for the heads up! I like XenServer and ESXi. I personally didn't like working with Hyper-V and it was annoying that it had to be integrated with Active Directory. @JaredBusch I will check out KVM, but with no GUI, it doesn't not seem as easy to work with as others.

          The issue is with local storage only. When using detatched storage this issue isn't present. Some weird limit that the devs had at the time.

          You can have something like 16TB attached to a single VM, just split up 8 times, which could then be spanned in the VM so it looks like a single drive.

          πŸ˜›

          black3dynamiteB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • magicmarkerM
            magicmarker
            last edited by

            I think I was confusing KVM with Xen. Maybe it was Xen that has no GUI. So am I just just doing a Fedora minimal install and adding the KVM package? How are you managing the VM's with the GUI? Are you installing a KVM management tool on an other pc? Or are you running Fedora with a desktop and opening up the KVM virtual machine manager app from there? I have a lot to read up on.

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

              @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

              I think I was confusing KVM with Xen. Maybe it was Xen that has no GUI.

              All hypervisors have a GUI if you add one, none have one if you don't. It's universal. In theory, someone could make a hypervisor with a build in GUI, but that would be crazy and no one has ever done it and we don't anticipate that anyone ever will. But no hypervisor limits you to that and there is no hypervisor on the market for which a GUI has not been built. All hypervisors have multiple GUI options today, in fact. Some are better than others, for sure, but GUI vs no-GUI is not a limitation.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • black3dynamiteB
                black3dynamite @DustinB3403
                last edited by

                @dustinb3403 said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                @dustinb3403 Oh wow, I was not aware of the 2TB virtual HDD limit with XenServer. I will be looking into a new Hypervisor for this. Thanks for the heads up! I like XenServer and ESXi. I personally didn't like working with Hyper-V and it was annoying that it had to be integrated with Active Directory. @JaredBusch I will check out KVM, but with no GUI, it doesn't not seem as easy to work with as others.

                The issue is with local storage only. When using detatched storage this issue isn't present. Some weird limit that the devs had at the time.

                You can have something like 16TB attached to a single VM, just split up 8 times, which could then be spanned in the VM so it looks like a single drive.

                πŸ˜›

                I believe the limit is because of ext3.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @black3dynamite
                  last edited by

                  @black3dynamite said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                  @dustinb3403 said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                  @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                  @dustinb3403 Oh wow, I was not aware of the 2TB virtual HDD limit with XenServer. I will be looking into a new Hypervisor for this. Thanks for the heads up! I like XenServer and ESXi. I personally didn't like working with Hyper-V and it was annoying that it had to be integrated with Active Directory. @JaredBusch I will check out KVM, but with no GUI, it doesn't not seem as easy to work with as others.

                  The issue is with local storage only. When using detatched storage this issue isn't present. Some weird limit that the devs had at the time.

                  You can have something like 16TB attached to a single VM, just split up 8 times, which could then be spanned in the VM so it looks like a single drive.

                  πŸ˜›

                  I believe the limit is because of ext3.

                  EXT3 has that limit, but the limit actually exists in this case because of the legacy container type being used.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • magicmarkerM
                    magicmarker
                    last edited by

                    I just want to mention that the KVM Hypervisor does take more than Linux basic knowledge. After @JaredBusch and @scottalanmiller recommended KVM on Fedora for the SAM-SD OS I have been playing with the KVM Hypervisor on a minimal Fedora install. I was able to successfully get a working KVM Hypervisor running. I realize that I've been very spoiled with the ESXi Hypervisor. I will require a more GUI based Hypervisor setup. I played around with the virt-manager which is a nice alternative to the cli for novice Linux users. There is still too much for me to learn with KVM and I never really did find instructions that really spell it out for me. I'm trying not to use VMware ESXi. I'm going to re-visit Hyper-V 2016 standalone with a Fedora Server (with desktop) VM to be my NFS file server. I'm open to any advice or words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                    travisdh1T scottalanmillerS F 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • travisdh1T
                      travisdh1 @magicmarker
                      last edited by

                      @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                      I just want to mention that the KVM Hypervisor does take more than Linux basic knowledge. After @JaredBusch and @scottalanmiller recommended KVM on Fedora for the SAM-SD OS I have been playing with the KVM Hypervisor on a minimal Fedora install. I was able to successfully get a working KVM Hypervisor running. I realize that I've been very spoiled with the ESXi Hypervisor. I will require a more GUI based Hypervisor setup. I played around with the virt-manager which is a nice alternative to the cli for novice Linux users. There is still too much for me to learn with KVM and I never really did find instructions that really spell it out for me. I'm trying not to use VMware ESXi. I'm going to re-visit Hyper-V 2016 standalone with a Fedora Server (with desktop) VM to be my NFS file server. I'm open to any advice or words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                      You couldn't find any good guides to KVM? We should see about writing one here.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                        last edited by

                        @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                        I just want to mention that the KVM Hypervisor does take more than Linux basic knowledge.

                        Depends on how you get it. You can get KVM from someone like Scale and never see anything of Linux ever.

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

                          @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                          I just want to mention that the KVM Hypervisor does take more than Linux basic knowledge. After @JaredBusch and @scottalanmiller recommended KVM on Fedora for the SAM-SD OS I have been playing with the KVM Hypervisor on a minimal Fedora install. I was able to successfully get a working KVM Hypervisor running. I realize that I've been very spoiled with the ESXi Hypervisor. I will require a more GUI based Hypervisor setup. I played around with the virt-manager which is a nice alternative to the cli for novice Linux users. There is still too much for me to learn with KVM and I never really did find instructions that really spell it out for me. I'm trying not to use VMware ESXi. I'm going to re-visit Hyper-V 2016 standalone with a Fedora Server (with desktop) VM to be my NFS file server. I'm open to any advice or words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                          I found KVM to be quite a bit easier than Hyper-V. Did the KVM GUI tools not work for you?

                          magicmarkerM DustinB3403D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • magicmarkerM
                            magicmarker @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller I only used the Virt-Adapter GUI tool. Where I was having trouble was making KVM see my drive volume on my hardware RAID controller. I then added a network bridge. I was at the point where I was creating a new VM and KMV didn't like my network bridge. Rebooted my KVM host and she wouldn't come out of recovery. I didn't like Hyper-V when I was testing it out a few months ago. Thanks for making me aware of Scale. I will check that out.

                            DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS stacksofplatesS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • DustinB3403D
                              DustinB3403 @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by DustinB3403

                              @scottalanmiller said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                              words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                              I found KVM to be quite a bit easier than Hyper-V. Did the KVM GUI tools not work for you?

                              The issue is a bit of the same issue I have with KVM. It's completely build it yourself. (unless you're using Scale). Which means bringing in a gui interface, selecting a dom0 etc etc.

                              It's a lot to plan and implement from the get-go for someone who is expecting a XenServer or ESXi type solution. Single ISO, install it to the hardware and download a command center of sorts.

                              If there was a guide on ML of here's a beginners approach to KVM with a full GUI, backups (the whole 9) then I could see more people picking it up to use it.

                              As it is, it's a , well fedora, or centos or debian or suse, and then you have libvirt or ovirt or the CLI only and then you have . . . .

                              There needs to be a simple "this is a windows admin (introductory) approach to setting up KVM for production environment, including a GUI and how to get things like ISO repos and backup repo's in place". As I certainly want to test KVM, but I don't want to have to pick every piece and install each.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • DustinB3403D
                                DustinB3403 @magicmarker
                                last edited by

                                @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                Thanks for making me aware of Scale. I will check that out.

                                Scale is a appliance provider, so you'd be looking at a hardware & software solution. If you're simply looking to test, then you'd be "building" it your self.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • F
                                  Francesco Provino @magicmarker
                                  last edited by

                                  @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                  I just want to mention that the KVM Hypervisor does take more than Linux basic knowledge. After @JaredBusch and @scottalanmiller recommended KVM on Fedora for the SAM-SD OS I have been playing with the KVM Hypervisor on a minimal Fedora install. I was able to successfully get a working KVM Hypervisor running. I realize that I've been very spoiled with the ESXi Hypervisor. I will require a more GUI based Hypervisor setup. I played around with the virt-manager which is a nice alternative to the cli for novice Linux users. There is still too much for me to learn with KVM and I never really did find instructions that really spell it out for me. I'm trying not to use VMware ESXi. I'm going to re-visit Hyper-V 2016 standalone with a Fedora Server (with desktop) VM to be my NFS file server. I'm open to any advice or words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                                  Really? I've found KVM/libvirt much easier than XS/XAPI. KVM/libvirt has almost NO limits whatsoever, it can run and use any recent piece of hardware, any storage tecnology… any networking stack, of course.

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

                                    @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                    @scottalanmiller I only used the Virt-Adapter GUI tool. Where I was having trouble was making KVM see my drive volume on my hardware RAID controller. I then added a network bridge. I was at the point where I was creating a new VM and KMV didn't like my network bridge. Rebooted my KVM host and she wouldn't come out of recovery. I didn't like Hyper-V when I was testing it out a few months ago. Thanks for making me aware of Scale. I will check that out.

                                    Hmm... have not done it recently on Fedora. Last time was Ubuntu and all of that was completely automatic.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • JaredBuschJ
                                      JaredBusch
                                      last edited by JaredBusch

                                      Install Fedora 26
                                      Install virtualization
                                      Install virtual machine manager on a Fedora based desktop (or Fedora based VM on your Windows desktop)

                                      Done.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 6
                                      • magicmarkerM
                                        magicmarker
                                        last edited by

                                        @Tim_G Just posted Fedora 26 KVM HTML5 Remote Access with Web-Console via Kimchi. This looks like it could be the answer to using KVM with a GUI interface that doesn't require too much Linux knowledge.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • stacksofplatesS
                                          stacksofplates @magicmarker
                                          last edited by

                                          @magicmarker said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                          @scottalanmiller I only used the Virt-Adapter GUI tool. Where I was having trouble was making KVM see my drive volume on my hardware RAID controller. I then added a network bridge. I was at the point where I was creating a new VM and KMV didn't like my network bridge. Rebooted my KVM host and she wouldn't come out of recovery. I didn't like Hyper-V when I was testing it out a few months ago. Thanks for making me aware of Scale. I will check that out.

                                          I assume you're talking about Virt-Manager?

                                          None of this is needed. Out of the box after an install you can select macvtap for the interface instead of NAT. You don't need a full bridge at all.

                                          0_1502125864458_macvtap.png

                                          Now a bridge makes it a little more flexible but only in host/guest communication. You can do an ovs bridge also, but that's more complicated. Seriously, starting out, install Fedora/CentOS, check the hypervisor role, and that's it.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • stacksofplatesS
                                            stacksofplates
                                            last edited by

                                            @dustinb3403 said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Linux OS advice for building a SAM-SD:

                                            words of encouragement to re-direct my focus back to the KVM Hypervisor.

                                            I found KVM to be quite a bit easier than Hyper-V. Did the KVM GUI tools not work for you?

                                            The issue is a bit of the same issue I have with KVM. It's completely build it yourself. (unless you're using Scale). Which means bringing in a gui interface, selecting a dom0 etc etc.

                                            It's a lot to plan and implement from the get-go for someone who is expecting a XenServer or ESXi type solution. Single ISO, install it to the hardware and download a command center of sorts.

                                            There really isn't any more to plan/implement. Run ISO for install. Pick hypervisor role. Done.

                                            Virt-Manager runs on the client for a GUI which is just a package install.

                                            With XenServer you need either XenCenter or XenOrchestra. XenCenter requires a Windows machine. XenOrchestra has to be installed with Git. Sure you made a script but that script is the work it takes to install it vs dnf install virt-manager.

                                            The only piece that isnt fully done is backup. And that can be done a few different ways and isn't a single solution for everyone.

                                            magicmarkerM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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