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    KVM or VMWare

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    • IRJI
      IRJ @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

      @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

      @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

      @hobbit666 said in KVM or VMWare:

      Didn't get on with KVM but thats down to my skill set. (i.e. limited linux skills)

      No business should run on just KVM. Until the most current iteration of Proxmox I would never recommend KVM for a business.

      I have used it personally for years now. But that is different than running a business. A business needs simple easy to follow processes that are enabled by things like Proxmox, vCenter, and Hyper-V Manager.

      Unless you use terraform or similar to build your servers on KVM. You would then need to leverage bash/powershell to do the builds. Then you have a very repeatable process that doesn't rely on GUI management. You can also use an open source tool like Jenkins to manage pipelines for deployment so it's easy repeatable.

      I would say most SMBs who aren't trained in IaC would be better off with other options.

      I would say that anyone that doesn't know how to use KVM well is just as unsafe (but doesn't know it) with VMware and should be even more wary to continue. If any business, of any size, lacks the skills to do IT well then they should address that rather than implementing something wrong poorly and just looking the other way. KVM remains the better answer for exactly that reason.

      The problem is paying for the talent. I was talking to a former coworker in a fortune 100. They are can't find people who are qualified to do DevOps. They have to keep raising pay and still not getting bites.

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

        @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

        @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

        @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

        @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

        @hobbit666 said in KVM or VMWare:

        Didn't get on with KVM but thats down to my skill set. (i.e. limited linux skills)

        No business should run on just KVM. Until the most current iteration of Proxmox I would never recommend KVM for a business.

        I have used it personally for years now. But that is different than running a business. A business needs simple easy to follow processes that are enabled by things like Proxmox, vCenter, and Hyper-V Manager.

        Unless you use terraform or similar to build your servers on KVM. You would then need to leverage bash/powershell to do the builds. Then you have a very repeatable process that doesn't rely on GUI management. You can also use an open source tool like Jenkins to manage pipelines for deployment so it's easy repeatable.

        I would say most SMBs who aren't trained in IaC would be better off with other options.

        I would say that anyone that doesn't know how to use KVM well is just as unsafe (but doesn't know it) with VMware and should be even more wary to continue. If any business, of any size, lacks the skills to do IT well then they should address that rather than implementing something wrong poorly and just looking the other way. KVM remains the better answer for exactly that reason.

        The problem is paying for the talent. I was talking to a former coworker in a fortune 100. They are can't find people who are qualified to do DevOps. They have to keep raising pay and still not getting bites.

        Just because they don't have the ability to attract talent doesn't mean that it's not the better option. It's a fake problem. The talent is available, and it is affordable, they either have failed processes in searching, or their willingness to hire is poor. There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

        A company can sabotage its own efforts in anything. But at the end of the day, KVM skills are available and affordable. Until that resource is tapped out and there is a shortage, no claims from any business tell us that KVM is a bad choice, only that they are a bad company.

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

          @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

          There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

          This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

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

            The enterprises that don't use KVM with their own APIs/emulator (or run fully cloud) run VMware for the APIs. The integration with the REST APIs is more important than any of the anscillary features of qemu/libvirt.

            IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • IRJI
              IRJ @stacksofplates
              last edited by

              @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

              The integration with the REST APIs is more important than any of the anscillary features of qemu/libvirt.

              Exactly. Stuff isn't done manually anymore.

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

                @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

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

                  @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                  There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                  This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                  It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

                  I'm not. You don't have a real pulse on the market it seems. These are just claims you're making without any basis. Just because you can find some people who can install Proxmox doesn't mean there is KVM expertise.

                  Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                  scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                    last edited by

                    @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                    @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                    @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                    @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                    There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                    This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                    It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

                    I'm not. You don't have a real pulse on the market it seems. These are just claims you're making without any basis. Just because you can find some people who can install Proxmox doesn't mean there is KVM expertise.

                    Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                    I never made the claim about anything about ProxMox. I just said that KVM skills are not in short supply. There's lots on the market. Everyone makes claims that there is a shortage to justify not providing in house talent and just going to vendors. It's an easy claim to make and if a company is crap at hiring it even makes it appear to be true. But we all work in IT and know that it's not even remotely true. Tons of people are on the market, and tons of support firms are too. The bottom line is that companies avoid hiring them (or anyone) because they like just paying a vendor as an excuse. Went through this this week, luckily once we talked about this exact stuff they understood immediately and didn't just hire a vendor to sell them stuff.

                    It's easy to follow the sales people and get paid as a middleman and not to do IT, so everyone wants to so it. Big enterprises are full of middle managers looking to protect their jobs. SO the process just keeps repeating. But don't repeat it to IT people as if we don't know better. We all know that skills are on the market and companies aren't hiring them.

                    stacksofplatesS IRJI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @stacksofplates
                      last edited by

                      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                      Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                      While I never implied it, it absolutely does. That's like saying that working with vSphere doesn't count as VMware experience. That's pretty absurd. In fact, as Jared was saying, you always deploy with management suites. So if anything, KVM without something like ProxMox might be less of KVM experience than ProxMox.

                      Is your claim that KVM experience only counts if you are building your own interfaces to it? What does that say about the 100% lack of VMware skills by the same logic?

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

                        From working in big business, if I was to use my small cross section of things, I'd say that VMware support is truly lacking in comparison to KVM. Like Windows, anyone and everyone claims to know VMware and has a cert and has touched it, but almost none can discuss it rationally and have little, if any, actual knowledge of it. And in real world experience, that includes VMware staff.

                        The whole concept around VMware support is that less knowledge is needed, but that's a dangerous place to be where you just push buttons and hope you chose well because you don't know what it is doing. That's the majority of VMware "support" we've seen in the real world, including this past week from VMware where they were pushing a solution before even knowing the customer's architecture or needs - demonstrably doing sales, not IT. And demonstrating the gap in support.

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

                          @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                          There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                          This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                          It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

                          I'm not. You don't have a real pulse on the market it seems. These are just claims you're making without any basis. Just because you can find some people who can install Proxmox doesn't mean there is KVM expertise.

                          Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                          I never made the claim about anything about ProxMox. I just said that KVM skills are not in short supply. There's lots on the market. Everyone makes claims that there is a shortage to justify not providing in house talent and just going to vendors. It's an easy claim to make and if a company is crap at hiring it even makes it appear to be true. But we all work in IT and know that it's not even remotely true. Tons of people are on the market, and tons of support firms are too. The bottom line is that companies avoid hiring them (or anyone) because they like just paying a vendor as an excuse. Went through this this week, luckily once we talked about this exact stuff they understood immediately and didn't just hire a vendor to sell them stuff.

                          It's easy to follow the sales people and get paid as a middleman and not to do IT, so everyone wants to so it. Big enterprises are full of middle managers looking to protect their jobs. SO the process just keeps repeating. But don't repeat it to IT people as if we don't know better. We all know that skills are on the market and companies aren't hiring them.

                          Point to any consultancy other than yourself that specializes in KVM. You continually say things like "we know", "every one knows", "it's clear" but never provide any proof.

                          Libvirt and qemu clearly aren't used widely and it shows in their APIs. You can say vmware is because of sales people but people writing the automation around these solutions make it clear that it isn't. Tools like VMware and even nutanix to a degree are the most widely used because it's much much easier to integrate with them.

                          I love KVM and love to use it but there is clearly not a lot of KVM talent running around.

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

                            @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                            From working in big business, if I was to use my small cross section of things, I'd say that VMware support is truly lacking in comparison to KVM.

                            Atatements like this are what make people not listen to things you say. This is just clearly not the case.

                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • IRJI
                              IRJ @IRJ
                              last edited by

                              @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                              @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                              The integration with the REST APIs is more important than any of the anscillary features of qemu/libvirt.

                              Exactly. Stuff isn't done manually anymore.

                              It's not even that about manual process. It's about being able audit, and have a repeatable process.

                              stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • IRJI
                                IRJ @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                                This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                                It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

                                I'm not. You don't have a real pulse on the market it seems. These are just claims you're making without any basis. Just because you can find some people who can install Proxmox doesn't mean there is KVM expertise.

                                Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                                I never made the claim about anything about ProxMox. I just said that KVM skills are not in short supply. There's lots on the market. Everyone makes claims that there is a shortage to justify not providing in house talent and just going to vendors. It's an easy claim to make and if a company is crap at hiring it even makes it appear to be true. But we all work in IT and know that it's not even remotely true. Tons of people are on the market, and tons of support firms are too. The bottom line is that companies avoid hiring them (or anyone) because they like just paying a vendor as an excuse. Went through this this week, luckily once we talked about this exact stuff they understood immediately and didn't just hire a vendor to sell them stuff.

                                It's easy to follow the sales people and get paid as a middleman and not to do IT, so everyone wants to so it. Big enterprises are full of middle managers looking to protect their jobs. SO the process just keeps repeating. But don't repeat it to IT people as if we don't know better. We all know that skills are on the market and companies aren't hiring them.

                                Screenshot_20211028-193306_LinkedIn.jpg

                                Screenshot_20211028-193325_LinkedIn.jpg

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

                                  @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                  From working in big business, if I was to use my small cross section of things, I'd say that VMware support is truly lacking in comparison to KVM.

                                  Atatements like this are what make people not listen to things you say. This is just clearly not the case.

                                  Because people hate the truth. 🙂

                                  Let's face it, we all know it is true. But it's not popular from the vendor's perspective. And people don't like to rock the boat. But anyone who has dealt with these vendors knows that getting actual support is not always as miraculous and people like to claim it to be.

                                  Once you get into the trenches and run IT, it's obvious how much of the vendor claims are false. I've worked at some of the big vendors, they farm work out just like little shops do. Tons of their skills are not in house, but calling on outsiders.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @IRJ
                                    last edited by

                                    @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    There's no shortage of KVM talent, so anyone telling you that they can't hire is actually telling you that they are so bad at searching that they can't function as a business or they are so bad to work for that no amount of money can fix it.

                                    This simply isn't true. No one in the enterprise space runs qemu/libvirt. They've developed their own APIs (gvisor, firecracker, etc).

                                    It's totally true. Just because you are talking to companies doing a bad job and lying about it and you are accepting what they say as truth doesn't make it so, at all. As long as talent is on the market, and it is without any shortage, then the issue is with the companies hiring (or failing to hire), this is just basic logic. They claim they can't hire, yet people are looking for that work that know what they are doing. GIven those facts, what they claim can't be true. Basic economics.

                                    I'm not. You don't have a real pulse on the market it seems. These are just claims you're making without any basis. Just because you can find some people who can install Proxmox doesn't mean there is KVM expertise.

                                    Also, Proxmox doesn't count as KVM expertise in case that's the angle you're trying to use here.

                                    I never made the claim about anything about ProxMox. I just said that KVM skills are not in short supply. There's lots on the market. Everyone makes claims that there is a shortage to justify not providing in house talent and just going to vendors. It's an easy claim to make and if a company is crap at hiring it even makes it appear to be true. But we all work in IT and know that it's not even remotely true. Tons of people are on the market, and tons of support firms are too. The bottom line is that companies avoid hiring them (or anyone) because they like just paying a vendor as an excuse. Went through this this week, luckily once we talked about this exact stuff they understood immediately and didn't just hire a vendor to sell them stuff.

                                    It's easy to follow the sales people and get paid as a middleman and not to do IT, so everyone wants to so it. Big enterprises are full of middle managers looking to protect their jobs. SO the process just keeps repeating. But don't repeat it to IT people as if we don't know better. We all know that skills are on the market and companies aren't hiring them.

                                    Screenshot_20211028-193306_LinkedIn.jpg

                                    Screenshot_20211028-193325_LinkedIn.jpg

                                    Is this supposed to tell me that KVM people aren't available? These look like job postings. I'm not sure what this is in reference to. That big companies hire badly we've already covered.

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

                                      @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                                      @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                                      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                      The integration with the REST APIs is more important than any of the anscillary features of qemu/libvirt.

                                      Exactly. Stuff isn't done manually anymore.

                                      It's not even that about manual process. It's about being able audit, and have a repeatable process.

                                      Auditing in KVM is pretty much not there lol.

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

                                        I think you are trying to repeat the old "Windows has more support than Linux" argument, which is obviously well known to be untrue. The market hires loads more Windows people than it does Linux, more people purport to work on Windows than Linux, and we all know how that works out. Your list shows exactly what I'm talking about. VMware has the volume of listings... this tells us how people think that they need to hire, or what they want. Tells literally nothing of what is available.

                                        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • 1
                                          1337 @stacksofplates
                                          last edited by

                                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          The integration with the REST APIs is more important than any of the anscillary features of qemu/libvirt.

                                          Exactly. Stuff isn't done manually anymore.

                                          It's not even that about manual process. It's about being able audit, and have a repeatable process.

                                          Auditing in KVM is pretty much not there lol.

                                          Just a side note, but what type of auditing are you talking about? Security audit? Compliance audit?

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

                                            @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                            think

                                            That's not apples to apples. One is support one is hiring engineers. Two different things.

                                            stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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