We have multiple Centos and Windows VM's running in VMWare ESX. I don't believe you would see any performance variance with a true VM unless you are somehow overtaxing the hardware elsewhere. The main advantages are backups and data recovery. If you have a hardware failure, just move the VM to another box, and it runs as before. Hi, I was getting ready to move my mail server to new hardware and was considering trying it in a VM. I have tried it before in an OpenVZ container, but had many problems. Of course, this is not a real VM. I have been migrating quite a few other applications to KVM and have experienced no problems at all. I was wondering if anyone had advice or an experience to share from stability, performance or any other point of view. Thanks. Tony Zakula -- Ben Hanson 540 433 9101 office 646 342 0396 mobile www.transprintusa.com www.colorep.com Learn more about our newest waterless sustainable technology at www.airdye.com
Hi, I was getting ready to move my mail server to new hardware and was considering trying it in a VM. I have tried it before in an OpenVZ container, but had many problems. Of course, this is not a real VM. I have been migrating quite a few other applications to KVM and have experienced no problems at all. I was wondering if anyone had advice or an experience to share from stability, performance or any other point of view. Thanks. Tony Zakula
Ben Hanson 540 433 9101 office 646 342 0396 mobile www.transprintusa.com www.colorep.com Learn more about our newest waterless sustainable technology at www.airdye.com
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