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Dec 26th, 2008, 09:32 PM
#1
Preferred Virtual Machine
Hi Guys,
For those running VMs, what 'player' do you use?
Preferences, pros & cons etc.
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Dec 26th, 2008, 11:11 PM
#2
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
I use VMWare Server on a Linux host.
Pros:
- Interoperable with VMWare ESX, VMWare Workstation, and VMWare Player
- Supports both Linux and Windows hosts
- Easy to port VMs from one machine to another — simply copy the files and add them into the target server
- Snapshots — save the state of a virtual machine at any point (even while running) and restore to that point. Can be automated too
- VMWare Tools for Linux and Windows guests
- Reasonable performance — suspending/resuming VMs is much quicker than using the guest OS's hibernation mode
- Command-line tools for managing VMs and virtual disks
- Highly configurable and scriptable
- Free
Cons:
- Server version 2.0 only supports a web-based management interface — not so bad once you get used to it though
- VM console view doesn't integrate as well as it could with GNOME and Windows user interfaces — I get around this by using remote desktop or VNC viewer and multiple workspaces
- Not as fast as a dedicated hypervisor such as ESX
- Have to rebuild modules every time the host kernel is updated (I think this is true of all Linux virtualisation software though).
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Dec 26th, 2008, 11:38 PM
#3
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
Hi Penagate, 
 Originally Posted by penagate
I use VMWare Server on a Linux host.
Pros:
I'm having a play with VMWare at the moment using VMWare Player (and I will try M$ VM when I get back home). I must say I didn't know VMWare Server was free tho.
Cheers,
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Dec 27th, 2008, 12:55 AM
#4
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
I agree with Penagate! I think you can download VM Server. However, it has activation purposes which I reckon you would need to buy the license key for. I don't know how much the license key cost because I got the software from Tafe and it already come with the license key.
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Dec 27th, 2008, 02:16 AM
#5
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
The licence keys are free. You simply need to register for them on the VMWare website.
VMWare Server is their 'entry-level' virtualisation product. VMWare ESX is their enterprise-level server solution and VMWare Workstation is a professional-grade product for workstation machines which provides better integration with the host operating system than VMWare Server.
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Dec 27th, 2008, 06:47 AM
#6
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
Indeed, ESX doesn't run on a host operating system, it includes its own kernel and has complete control of the host system.
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Dec 28th, 2008, 07:39 AM
#7
Hyperactive Member
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
This wikipedia page can be kind of useful in comparing different virtual machine software:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compari...rtual_machines
My monkey wearing the fedora points and laughs at you.
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Jan 1st, 2009, 06:35 PM
#8
Re: Preferred Virtual Machine
there's a reason microsoft started giving virtual pc away. And vmware includes better hardware support. Once you have installed the guest OS, you can install a driver package that gives you much better performance.
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