Home Lab Hypervisor?
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 My little lab uses Hyper-V with CentOS VMs  
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 @NerdyDad said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Going to start off with KVM. Plan on trying to get that off of the ground this weekend. @Tim_G said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: KVM is a lot of fun. I'd recommend that before Hyper-V if you're just starting out. - What "flavor" of KVM - are you CentOS/Fed 25 etc? (I know they're pretty much the same)
- What is the "Xen Orchestra" equivalent for KVM?
 
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 @DustinB3403 said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: XenServer, considering moving to KVM to see how it works. I'm in the same boat right now. Really like KVM on my Korora laptop. 
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 @FATeknollogee said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: What "flavor" of KVM - are you CentOS/Fed 25 etc? (I know they're pretty much the same) I've had awesome success and experience with KVM on Fedora 25 Cinnamon Desktop. This is the process I used here, plus it contains some good informational links that will help you along the way. They've helped me. 
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 I'm going with CentOS 7 server with KVM/qemu since that's what my book is going with. As far as XO goes, I have no idea and would have to refer to one of our veterans for that. 
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 You could go all out and setup oVirt. You can manage it via a web browser. 
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 Virt-manager vs oVirt, which one is considered more "up to date"? 
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 @FATeknollogee said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Virt-manager vs oVirt, which one is considered more "up to date"? For virt-manager, it depends on the distro you will be using since you will be installing from that distribution. Not sure about oVirt. 
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 XenServer but I'm switching to KVM 
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 @FATeknollogee said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Virt-manager vs oVirt, which one is considered more "up to date"? Neither is out of date. If you are familiar with ESXi C# Vsphere client to manage hosts use Virt Manager, if you want something like ESXi Virtual appliance to manage multiple hosts go for oVirt which is web based solution. Virt-manager targeted at manually managing couple of hosts, oVirt is solution for many hosts. 
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 Is oVirt a virtual appliance like XOA? 
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 Two KVM servers on CentOS 7. 
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 @FATeknollogee said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Virt-manager vs oVirt, which one is considered more "up to date"? To me, oVirt was slow. My one host has 8 cores and 96GB RAM and it took a long time to do stuff. That could be because I did the all in one install. But I'm assuming that's what most people here will be doing. I find straight KVM easy and super fast. I have a smaller LV for the OS and then a large LV for the qcow2 images. A full clone of a template takes about 2 seconds (thin provisioned qcow2). You can do some pretty cool stuff with libvirt. I have a template that updates nightly without manually spinning up the disk. I have a clone script that clones the template and sets the MAC, then runs virt-customize to set the hostname in the VM, and then finally starts it. 
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 @FATeknollogee said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Is oVirt a virtual appliance like XOA? you have a number of options from installing it on dedicated machines to installing it as an OVA. here the docs 
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 @aaronstuder I've not a home lab. for personal needs I use KVM as my machines run linux on bare metal. 
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 KVM on my Scale cluster. KVM on my laptop machine. Hyper-V cluster just spun up this week (three nodes.) 
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 @scottalanmiller said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: ...Hyper-V cluster just spun up this week (three nodes.) Why are you using Hyper-V? 
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 @stacksofplates said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: Two KVM servers on CentOS 7. You need 2x CentOS 7 vm's to run oVirt? 
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 @FATeknollogee no, two physically host. 1 is none, 2 is one. 
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 @aaronstuder said in Home Lab Hypervisor?: @FATeknollogee no, two physically host. 1 is none, 2 is one. I don't understand? 









