At Fri, 27 May 2011 14:33:23 -0400 (EDT) CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I have been working off and on with Xen and KVM on a couple of test > hosts for that past year or so and while now everything seems to > function as expected, more or less, I find myself asking the > question: Why? > > We run our own servers at our own sites for our own purposes. We do > not, with a few small exceptions, host alien domains. So, while > rapidly provisioning or dynamically expanding a client's vm might be > very attractive to a public hosting provider that is not our > business model at all. > > Why would a small company not in the public hosting business choose > to employ VM technology? What are the benefits over operating > several individual small form factor servers or blades instead? I > am curious because what I can find on the net respecting VM use > cases, outside of for public providers or application testing, seems > to me mostly puff and smoke. One of the benefits of VM over small form factor servers or blades is ecomonies of scale: a 'larger' server box (larger == additional memory and disk space, maybe more cores) might be cheaper than several smaller, lower-end machines. And given the way things are going in terms of many core procssors, memory and disk prices, these sorts of ecomonies of scale are going to increase -- it may stop being cost effective (or even impossible) to get a 2-core box with 2-4 Gig and a 160gig disk and using a 6-core processor with 64gig of RAM and a 4TB disk is insane for a *simple* web server, even if you are hosting a couple dozen virtual hosts. > > This might be considered OT but since CentOS is what we use it seems > to me best that I ask here to start. > -- Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / heller@xxxxxxxxxxxx Deepwoods Software -- http://www.deepsoft.com/ () ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail /\ www.asciiribbon.org -- against proprietary attachments _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos