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    • IRJI
      IRJ @stacksofplates
      last edited by

      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

      @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

      think

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

      No idea why this quoted so weird.

      "Just because something may be supported, doesn't imply that it is support."

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

        @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

        @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

        @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

        @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

        think

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

        No idea why this quoted so weird.

        "Just because something may be supported, doesn't imply that it is support."

        😄

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

          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

          @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

          @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?

          All of the above.

          OK, thanks.

          But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

          IRJI stacksofplatesS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • IRJI
            IRJ @1337
            last edited by

            @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

            @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

            @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

            @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?

            All of the above.

            OK, thanks.

            But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

            Openshift is on azure now

            https://cloud.redhat.com/products/azure-openshift

            1 ObsolesceO 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • 1
              1337 @IRJ
              last edited by 1337

              @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

              @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

              @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

              @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

              @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?

              All of the above.

              OK, thanks.

              But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

              Openshift is on azure now

              https://cloud.redhat.com/products/azure-openshift

              Yes, Red Hat says you can install and run it on:

              • your laptop
              • public cloud - Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. Coming soon: IBM Cloud, Ali Cloud
              • your datacenter
              • managed by Red Hat

              https://developers.redhat.com/products/openshift/download

              I haven't used it though but it would be fun to look into. I always thought you needed a huge infrastructure just to run it.

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

                @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                @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?

                All of the above.

                OK, thanks.

                But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

                I don't know anyone running RHEV. I also don't know anyone actually running openatack. I'm sure there are a few but it's hardly the norm.

                Openshift may use libvirt underneath with kubevirt but I think most are just running containers. I don't know too many places running openshift either over just k8s.

                1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ObsolesceO
                  Obsolesce @IRJ
                  last edited by

                  @irj said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                  @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?

                  All of the above.

                  OK, thanks.

                  But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

                  Openshift is on azure now

                  https://cloud.redhat.com/products/azure-openshift

                  And I bet the APIs, Monitoring, Auditing, ability to integrate services, etc. is fantastic.

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

                    Here's one example of why KVM isnt more popular than it is. I love how KVM does snapshotting. I can create thousands of snapshots off of a metadata preallocated qcow2 image because it's reallocate on write and not copy on write. You would incur almost no performance hit up to a few thousand snapshots. But who works that way anymore? If you have the experience to automate reallocated snapshots and block commit them back to the base, you have the expertise to just create ephemeral systems and not use snapshots at all. Then you turn your expertise to automation of more important things. It's good at what it does, but when you have the expertise to leverage it at that level, you don't need it anymore.

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

                      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                      @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                      @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                      @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                      @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?

                      All of the above.

                      OK, thanks.

                      But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

                      I don't know anyone running RHEV. I also don't know anyone actually running openatack. I'm sure there are a few but it's hardly the norm.

                      Openshift may use libvirt underneath with kubevirt but I think most are just running containers. I don't know too many places running openshift either over just k8s.

                      There are 4000+ jobs on linkedin in the US when searching for openstack.
                      8000+ jobs when searching for openshift. And I see companies such as Bank of America, Citi, Delta Air Lines, Federal Reserve etc. So I'm guessing it's in use for sure.

                      IRJI stacksofplatesS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • IRJI
                        IRJ @1337
                        last edited by

                        @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                        @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                        @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                        @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                        @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                        @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?

                        All of the above.

                        OK, thanks.

                        But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

                        I don't know anyone running RHEV. I also don't know anyone actually running openatack. I'm sure there are a few but it's hardly the norm.

                        Openshift may use libvirt underneath with kubevirt but I think most are just running containers. I don't know too many places running openshift either over just k8s.

                        There are 4000+ jobs on linkedin in the US when searching for openstack.
                        8000+ jobs when searching for openshift. And I see companies such as Bank of America, Citi, Delta Air Lines, Federal Reserve etc. So I'm guessing it's in use for sure.

                        Yeah some companies associated with the government are looking at openshift now. The problem they are facing in testing it is lack of talent.

                        There's 69k+ kubernetes jobs available in kubernetes. Even so kubernetes engineers are hard to find

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

                          @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @pete-s said in KVM or VMWare:

                          @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?

                          All of the above.

                          OK, thanks.

                          But how about libvirt being used by openstack and openshift? There has to be a lot of enterprises running that in their hybrid cloud environment. Surely not everyone is running their workloads only on Amazon or Google. Red Hat has to be out there pushing a lot of this to their enterprise customers. And surely these environments are fully automated and auditable just like aws or gcp. Or isn't that the case?

                          I don't know anyone running RHEV. I also don't know anyone actually running openatack. I'm sure there are a few but it's hardly the norm.

                          Openshift may use libvirt underneath with kubevirt but I think most are just running containers. I don't know too many places running openshift either over just k8s.

                          There are 4000+ jobs on linkedin in the US when searching for openstack.
                          8000+ jobs when searching for openshift. And I see companies such as Bank of America, Citi, Delta Air Lines, Federal Reserve etc. So I'm guessing it's in use for sure.

                          That's not really that many positions. And that's not a great metric because a lot are most likely repeats and are possibly just anscillary tech knowledge. "Must understand hypervisors: VMware, openstack, xenserver, etc"

                          I'm not saying they aren't used but they aren't popular.

                          Edit because openatack isn't a thing.

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

                            Plus even with things like openshift, kubevirt is doing any KVM work for you. You need 0 KVM expertise to let Kubernetes manage your hypervisor/VMs.

                            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • JaredBuschJ
                              JaredBusch @stacksofplates
                              last edited by

                              @stacksofplates said in KVM or VMWare:

                              Plus even with things like openshift, kubevirt is doing any KVM work for you. You need 0 KVM expertise to let Kubernetes manage your hypervisor/VMs.

                              You also need 0 KVM experience to run Proxmox.

                              @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.

                              @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                              While I never implied it, it absolutely does. That's like saying that working with vSphere doesn't count as VMware experience.
                              In fact, as Jared was saying, you always deploy with management suites.

                              You do as I say and deploy management suites because the SMB sector does not know jack shit about what they are doing. If they did, you would not have a job fixing their broke ass shit.

                              Most of the user posts you see about Proxmox never even mention KVM unless someone really fucked shit up.

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

                                @scottalanmiller you are out of touch. You have not had a real job in years, and your big business job was more than a decade ago.

                                I know I am out of touch, I do keep minor reading on tools and processes though. Even if I am unable to implement them or truly learn them. But your blatant refusal to admit as much and update yourself is clearly showing.

                                Sure, lots of the SMB mediocrity is still all about the local virtualization. Hell, I still see physical servers on occasion.

                                But that is not where things are moving.

                                scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • CloudKnightC
                                  CloudKnight
                                  last edited by

                                  I used to use XCP-NG couldn't fault it, moved over to proxmox a while back. I have had no issues with Proxmox. Last time I use Vmware was a couple of businesses was using esxi 6.5 I believe. I personally have no issue with Vmware just have no interest in using it in production.

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

                                    @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

                                    @scottalanmiller you are out of touch. You have not had a real job in years, and your big business job was more than a decade ago.

                                    I know I am out of touch, I do keep minor reading on tools and processes though. Even if I am unable to implement them or truly learn them. But your blatant refusal to admit as much and update yourself is clearly showing.

                                    Sure, lots of the SMB mediocrity is still all about the local virtualization. Hell, I still see physical servers on occasion.

                                    But that is not where things are moving.

                                    I have bank experience currently, though. Just this week, the KVM over VMware discussion came up and KVM won, hands down. It wasn't even close. And that was with VMware themselves pitching their solution.

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

                                      @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

                                      But that is not where things are moving.

                                      There are always "trends" with the "follow the buzz word" crowd. Like "cloud". Did cloud become an import part of the equation, heck yeah. Is every workload going to cloud? Heck no. Is 90% of the workloads on cloud there because it was the right choice? No, it's because it was the word someone knew how to repeat to sound cool.

                                      Heading towards doesn't make something a big solution. If anything, things are "heading away" from VMware since it already had the pole position.

                                      And what "most people" do is almost always total incompetence. Remember, the average company fails. The average of anything is complete garbage. That VMware is used more than anything else is a testament to their sales team, and says nothing about their product (good or bad.) The average deployment is not done based on what is good for the business, but rather what sales is able to convince people of.

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

                                        @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                        @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

                                        @scottalanmiller you are out of touch. You have not had a real job in years, and your big business job was more than a decade ago.

                                        I know I am out of touch, I do keep minor reading on tools and processes though. Even if I am unable to implement them or truly learn them. But your blatant refusal to admit as much and update yourself is clearly showing.

                                        Sure, lots of the SMB mediocrity is still all about the local virtualization. Hell, I still see physical servers on occasion.

                                        But that is not where things are moving.

                                        I have bank experience currently, though. Just this week, the KVM over VMware discussion came up and KVM won, hands down. It wasn't even close. And that was with VMware themselves pitching their solution.

                                        I just simply don't believe this unless it's a no name single branch bank somewhere. In which case, his original point still stands.

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

                                          @scottalanmiller said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          @jaredbusch said in KVM or VMWare:

                                          But that is not where things are moving.

                                          There are always "trends" with the "follow the buzz word" crowd. Like "cloud". Did cloud become an import part of the equation, heck yeah. Is every workload going to cloud? Heck no. Is 90% of the workloads on cloud there because it was the right choice? No, it's because it was the word someone knew how to repeat to sound cool.

                                          These are trends anymore. They are best practices.

                                          It's more than should this specific workload go to the cloud or not. There's so many things at play beside the infrastructure of a single application. If you understood compliance frameworks and SDLC maturity, you'd know that doing all that stuff on premise is much more difficult and alot more work for the organization to maintain. In a large enterprise, audits are constantly going on, and there's so many things that I have to be in place.

                                          You can say all these requirements are stupid, and the most companies fail at IT. At the end of the day, these companies are making billions of dollars and revenue and are leaders in their industry. These leaders are paying $200-300 an hour for contractors and consultants to increase their maturity levels.

                                          Your expertise is mostly with businesses with less than 10 employees who are struggling to survive let alone care about IT processes. It's such an apple and oranges comparison to Fortune 500s. You may have had expertise in enterprise over a decade ago, but it's obvious that's it's been over 10 years since you've had any experience. Nothing wrong with having a niche, but I wonder why you left $500k + job to deal with these tiny businesses.

                                          I also think you shouldn't reject new concepts without understanding them. You should do some training in modern IT. I honestly think you'd love it! Embrace new concepts and at least give them the time of day. The attitude of everyone is stupid except me gets old. Especially when you aren't grasping the concepts or are basing your opinions off how things were 15 years ago.

                                          ymiqiv75e6631.jpg

                                          scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • CloudKnightC
                                            CloudKnight
                                            last edited by

                                            I would of thought the industry standard would be vmware. I know a lot of datacenteres use KVM/Proxmox though

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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