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    Xen and Mdadm?

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said:

      So he specifically asked if he can use a GUI to add them. You can in ESXi and Hyper-V, but apparently no, you can not use the GUI to do this in XS.

      Not quite fair as VMware can't do this at all. So you can't do it from there at all, CLI or GUI.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • bbigfordB
        bbigford
        last edited by bbigford

        Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

        coliverC scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • coliverC
          coliver @bbigford
          last edited by coliver

          @BBigford said:

          Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input?

          XenServer is open source and free. Just like Redhat if you want to pay for support you can. Even with XenServer you get all the updates for free. XenServer was "created" by Citrix, but they have since GPL'd (I think) the code and have given the code base to the Linux foundation. There is no obligation to pay for it.

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

            @BBigford said:

            Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

            It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

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

              @coliver said:

              @BBigford said:

              Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input?

              XenServer is open source and free. Just like Redhat if you want to pay for support you can. Even with XenServer you get all the updates for free. XenServer was "created" by Citrix, but they have since GPL'd (I think) the code and have given the code base to the Linux foundation. There is no obligation to pay for it.

              But if you DO want to pay for it, I can sell it to you.

              coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • coliverC
                coliver @scottalanmiller
                last edited by coliver

                @scottalanmiller said:

                @coliver said:

                @BBigford said:

                Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input?

                XenServer is open source and free. Just like Redhat if you want to pay for support you can. Even with XenServer you get all the updates for free. XenServer was "created" by Citrix, but they have since GPL'd (I think) the code and have given the code base to the Linux foundation. There is no obligation to pay for it.

                But if you DO want to pay for it, I can sell it to you.

                Yep, I'll burn a DVD and ship it to you for 200$. That being said some 3rd parties probably are a better avenue for support then Citrix would be.

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

                  @coliver said:

                  @scottalanmiller said:

                  @coliver said:

                  @BBigford said:

                  Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input?

                  XenServer is open source and free. Just like Redhat if you want to pay for support you can. Even with XenServer you get all the updates for free. XenServer was "created" by Citrix, but they have since GPL'd (I think) the code and have given the code base to the Linux foundation. There is no obligation to pay for it.

                  But if you DO want to pay for it, I can sell it to you.

                  Yep, I'll burn a DVD and ship it to you for 200$. That being said some 3rd parties probably are a better avenue for support then Citrix would be.

                  Oh I wasn't offering support, I'll just sell XenServer.

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

                    $20 for XenServer via download, for an extra $5 I'll ship you a DVD of it! Right to your door.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • B
                      biggen
                      last edited by

                      I appreciate the help guys. I'll start experimenting with XenServer and see what I can break on a perfectly working system...

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • bbigfordB
                        bbigford @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller said:

                        @BBigford said:

                        Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

                        It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

                        Ok, I'm seeing it more clearly now. What Citrix was selling, was basically just support (bundled with the software of course, but they aren't technically selling the software, because they can't).

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

                          @BBigford said:

                          @scottalanmiller said:

                          @BBigford said:

                          Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

                          It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

                          Ok, I'm seeing it more clearly now. What Citrix was selling, was basically just support (bundled with the software of course, but they aren't technically selling the software, because they can't).

                          Almost right. They WERE selling the software, but it is also free. The GPL license that they are under allows EVERYONE to resell anything. So Xen, KVM, XenServer, CentOS, Ubuntu, etc. They are all under the GPL. You are allowed to give them away for free, the source is open. You are ALSO allowed to charge for them. You meaning EVERYONE. I can legally sell you Ubuntu, CentOS, XenServer, etc. So can Citrix. We are just... selling you something free. Does that make sense? I can charge you $1,000 for it, but you can turn around and give it away free or sell it yourself.

                          bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • bbigfordB
                            bbigford @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller said:

                            @BBigford said:

                            @scottalanmiller said:

                            @BBigford said:

                            Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

                            It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

                            Ok, I'm seeing it more clearly now. What Citrix was selling, was basically just support (bundled with the software of course, but they aren't technically selling the software, because they can't).

                            Almost right. They WERE selling the software, but it is also free. The GPL license that they are under allows EVERYONE to resell anything. So Xen, KVM, XenServer, CentOS, Ubuntu, etc. They are all under the GPL. You are allowed to give them away for free, the source is open. You are ALSO allowed to charge for them. You meaning EVERYONE. I can legally sell you Ubuntu, CentOS, XenServer, etc. So can Citrix. We are just... selling you something free. Does that make sense? I can charge you $1,000 for it, but you can turn around and give it away free or sell it yourself.

                            Okay, so Citrix didn't create XenServer (like taking Xen and making a distro specific to what they wanted to do with it). XenServer is essentially just a distro of Xen, that the Xen team created. Is that right? I'm trying to step back and see this clearly. If Xen is to Linux, I'm guessing XenServer is to Red Hat, or Ubuntu? It's just a distro of Xen? I've been looking at Xen wiki and The Xen Project. But I haven't found anything that says "here is the history of all things Xen so as not to confuse any parts of Xen itself."

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

                              @BBigford said:

                              @scottalanmiller said:

                              @BBigford said:

                              @scottalanmiller said:

                              @BBigford said:

                              Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

                              It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

                              Ok, I'm seeing it more clearly now. What Citrix was selling, was basically just support (bundled with the software of course, but they aren't technically selling the software, because they can't).

                              Almost right. They WERE selling the software, but it is also free. The GPL license that they are under allows EVERYONE to resell anything. So Xen, KVM, XenServer, CentOS, Ubuntu, etc. They are all under the GPL. You are allowed to give them away for free, the source is open. You are ALSO allowed to charge for them. You meaning EVERYONE. I can legally sell you Ubuntu, CentOS, XenServer, etc. So can Citrix. We are just... selling you something free. Does that make sense? I can charge you $1,000 for it, but you can turn around and give it away free or sell it yourself.

                              Okay, so Citrix didn't create XenServer (like taking Xen and making a distro specific to what they wanted to do with it). XenServer is essentially just a distro of Xen, that the Xen team created. Is that right? I'm trying to step back and see this clearly. If Xen is to Linux, I'm guessing XenServer is to Red Hat, or Ubuntu? It's just a distro of Xen? I've been looking at Xen wiki and The Xen Project. But I haven't found anything that says "here is the history of all things Xen so as not to confuse any parts of Xen itself."

                              Correct. Xen is the hypervisor and goes way back, it is nearly as old as VMware. Both of them predate hardware assistance on the CPU! Xen is the only one that has retained this heritage in its current design, it is the only hypervisor left that has a means of running without hardware assistance.

                              Xen is to Linux as XenServer is to RHEL. The CentOS version of XenServer is XCP. Identical, but without the Citrix branding. XenServer and XCP are a distro of Xen. Xen does nothing on its own, just like Linux.

                              Competing with XenServer / XCP are the native RHEL / CentOS, Ubuntu and Suse Xen stacks. You can do Xen from any of them (we were Suse/Xen for a long time) and this used to be popular because they were so much more up to date than XenServer. XS has fixed that for the most part and now that XenServer / XCP is a reference implementation of a Xen distro directly from the Xen team at the Linux Foundation there isn't much call for other versions.

                              Oracle VM is a head to head distro competitor with XenServer.

                              bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • bbigfordB
                                bbigford @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @BBigford said:

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @BBigford said:

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @BBigford said:

                                Xen... XenServer... Xen server... Something I haven't looked into is the pricing. Xen is open source & free at the same time, that I have gathered. XenServer is something that Citrix has created, and charges for (open source, but not free... Red Hat in the same fashion. Open source, but not free). Xen server, any Xen server (can be open source and free, or can be XenServer... It's just a vague term). Anyone have any input? I'm always looking at new options for cost effective deployment in the right environment.

                                It's all open and all free. XenServer has no way to not be free because the license protects you. Citrix didn't create XenServer, it's built from Linux' Xen project and CentOS. Citrix just bundled it and sold support. And even that is in the past. Xen, XenServer are both part of the Linux Foundation, are both GPL and that means free.

                                Ok, I'm seeing it more clearly now. What Citrix was selling, was basically just support (bundled with the software of course, but they aren't technically selling the software, because they can't).

                                Almost right. They WERE selling the software, but it is also free. The GPL license that they are under allows EVERYONE to resell anything. So Xen, KVM, XenServer, CentOS, Ubuntu, etc. They are all under the GPL. You are allowed to give them away for free, the source is open. You are ALSO allowed to charge for them. You meaning EVERYONE. I can legally sell you Ubuntu, CentOS, XenServer, etc. So can Citrix. We are just... selling you something free. Does that make sense? I can charge you $1,000 for it, but you can turn around and give it away free or sell it yourself.

                                Okay, so Citrix didn't create XenServer (like taking Xen and making a distro specific to what they wanted to do with it). XenServer is essentially just a distro of Xen, that the Xen team created. Is that right? I'm trying to step back and see this clearly. If Xen is to Linux, I'm guessing XenServer is to Red Hat, or Ubuntu? It's just a distro of Xen? I've been looking at Xen wiki and The Xen Project. But I haven't found anything that says "here is the history of all things Xen so as not to confuse any parts of Xen itself."

                                Correct. Xen is the hypervisor and goes way back, it is nearly as old as VMware. Both of them predate hardware assistance on the CPU! Xen is the only one that has retained this heritage in its current design, it is the only hypervisor left that has a means of running without hardware assistance.

                                Xen is to Linux as XenServer is to RHEL. The CentOS version of XenServer is XCP. Identical, but without the Citrix branding. XenServer and XCP are a distro of Xen. Xen does nothing on its own, just like Linux.

                                Competing with XenServer / XCP are the native RHEL / CentOS, Ubuntu and Suse Xen stacks. You can do Xen from any of them (we were Suse/Xen for a long time) and this used to be popular because they were so much more up to date than XenServer. XS has fixed that for the most part and now that XenServer / XCP is a reference implementation of a Xen distro directly from the Xen team at the Linux Foundation there isn't much call for other versions.

                                Oracle VM is a head to head distro competitor with XenServer.

                                Ok, that makes a lot more sense. So if you want XenServer, you have to go to Citrix and pay for it, right? I did a proof of concept with XenServer in the past, and went to Citrix for the software & licensing. What I'm understanding, is that Citrix designed XenServer, and it is a paid for solution (like RHEL requires payment, and service is an optional/additional payment).

                                Thanks for taking the time to explain this by the way.

                                scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DustinB3403D
                                  DustinB3403
                                  last edited by DustinB3403

                                  Xen, XenServer, they are both free.

                                  You'd be buying the software (which is offered for free) support with it from Citrix, but it's still there for free.

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

                                    @BBigford said:

                                    Ok, that makes a lot more sense. So if you want XenServer, you have to go to Citrix and pay for it, right?

                                    No, there is nothing that requires money anywhere in the Xen ecosystem. Nor is there any hypervisor on the market for which you pay any money.

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

                                      @BBigford said:

                                      What I'm understanding, is that Citrix designed XenServer, and it is a paid for solution (like RHEL requires payment, and service is an optional/additional payment).

                                      Even RHEL is free. Red Hat doesn't provide a free download of it, but they have no means of not having it be free. Nothing built on Linux is non-free, it has no way to not be free. RH just doesn't have to pay to give it to you. Same thing with Xen. Xen and all products built on it are free, period. XenServer has always been free, Citrix just didn't used to advertise how to get it for free. Now they do.

                                      bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • bbigfordB
                                        bbigford @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said:

                                        @BBigford said:

                                        What I'm understanding, is that Citrix designed XenServer, and it is a paid for solution (like RHEL requires payment, and service is an optional/additional payment).

                                        Even RHEL is free. Red Hat doesn't provide a free download of it, but they have no means of not having it be free. Nothing built on Linux is non-free, it has no way to not be free. RH just doesn't have to pay to give it to you. Same thing with Xen. Xen and all products built on it are free, period. XenServer has always been free, Citrix just didn't used to advertise how to get it for free. Now they do.

                                        If you want RHEL, aren't you required to purchase a license (~$799) and bind it with a subscription in the customer online portal? That's how I've always done it...

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

                                          @BBigford said:

                                          If you want RHEL, aren't you required to purchase a license (~$799) and bind it with a subscription in the customer online portal? That's how I've always done it...

                                          Nope, they have no means of making you pay for RHEL, they don't own the software that they are selling, how could they demand that you pay for it?

                                          bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • bbigfordB
                                            bbigford @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said:

                                            @BBigford said:

                                            If you want RHEL, aren't you required to purchase a license (~$799) and bind it with a subscription in the customer online portal? That's how I've always done it...

                                            Nope, they have no means of making you pay for RHEL, they don't own the software that they are selling, how could they demand that you pay for it?

                                            Where would someone download a free copy? I've always been told by any admin, "Red Hat requires you pay for it. If you want free, download CentOS."

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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