On 3/2/2011 2:06 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote: > >>> Differently put, we already do this with servers. One big& fast Quad >>> XEON can run many client's Virtual Machines, very easily. And many of >>> those Virtual Machines host a few hundred websites, thus saving a lot >>> on rack space, electricity, etc, etc. >> >> Servers are normally optimized with lots of disk spindles to spread >> multi-user use of the one remaining slow resource around. > > True, but in a one-user-one-drive (or 2 drives in RAID1) setup, the > disk I/O wouldn't be a problem, or the limiting factor. I thought some of your scenarios involved doing things in both os's at once. Which will make them want the disk head to be in different places at the same time. >> Give the VM its own disk and it won't have much impact on the host. >> You'll probably still want to run video-intense things natively, though. >> And if you aren't a developer doing throwaway tests, what's the point >> of using a VM for resource-intensive things anyway? > > > There are many reasons why one would do this kind of things. Just > thinking of my normal day-to-day work, I often start-up a new VM to > test certain functionality of some software package, without affecting > anything on my PC. If it is at work, why not park the VM on a server that is probably better equipped? > My laptop runs Windows 7 at this stage, purely for > Quickbooks and a few other Windows-only applications. So, in this case > it would be nice to have Windows running permanently on my PC which > will allow the accounts person to still access it remotely on her PC > and I can still do stuff in Quickbooks as needed. But, I would prefer > real-time access. Then why not run it as the host? It probably handles sleep mode and waking up on different networks better than Centos anyway. Or as a VM, park it on a server where everyone who needs access can reach it remotely. > I think the major problem here is that the tools at hand, i.e. XEN + > Virtual Machine Manager (or for that matter VirtualBox / VMWare / etc) > isn't yet optimized for this kind of usage. > > I guess we need better VGA-passthrough drivers, and / or a more > optimized interface. Accessing the VM's via VNC / Remote Desktop / XN > / etc is also probably also a possibility. Have you tried vmware player with vmware tools installed in the guest for comparison? Or NX connecting to freenx in the case of a Linux guest? -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos