> >>> I was thinking about implementing Xen for our school district. Now > >>> that > >>> I'm hearing all of this I guess I need to look at something else. > >>> What does everyone recommend? > >>> Thanks > >>> Bo Lynch > >> How much money do you have? > >> What (how many systems, what do they do?) do you actually want to > >> virtualize? > >> Are you going to be around your school for the next couple of years? > >> On a small scale, running VMware ESX3i or VMware-server is perfectly > >> possible. > > Right now we have a about 30 servers. Mixture of > > CentOS,debian,slack,windows. > > Free is always the best cost and is why we have been moving toward > > open source as much as possible. > Hm. For 30 servers, ESX3i might still be OK. > Provided, you don't want/need live-migration etc. > AFAIK, you can buy-in that at a later point. Yes, you can. You just install Virtual Center and add the ESX hosts (provided you can enough licenses to add all your [physcial] hosts). For 30 servers I'd *guess* that would be around three physical hosts. > What I hate about ESX(i) is the fact that you have to use Windows to > manage the stuff (in the long run). True; but at the last VMworld they did announce they are going to refactor Virtual Center [which sucks, Windows or not, currently] to be cross platform. > I'm not sure if KVM is upto the task, yet. The toolset, documentation, and support/community are really important to successful virtualization; VMware easy trumps other solutions in all those categories IMO. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos