Le Lun 24 juin 2013 13:08, Matthew Miller a écrit : > So, the converse is that as actual workloads move to VMs (let alone > cloud), > the host systems become a special case, and the "normal" case for a server > tends to become much more simple: either a single interface probably with > fixed-address DHCP, or in most complicated cases several interfaces on > specific networks known by convention. That's a big assumption, just because the hypervisor is more complex does not mean vms get simpler (this is the same faulty reasoning that vmware made a few years past when it told everyone that esxi would replace bioses and systems would be reduced to their simplest expression — read give us your money, not to Microsoft or Red Hat). In fact I am quite certain vm complexity is a direct factor of management tools maturity, and people will continue to deploy the most complex configurations they can, as long as the tools let them. No one wants to delegate anything when the problem can be solved without delegation. Regards, -- Nicolas Mailhot -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel