The most read topics in our blog during last weeks have been Apple‘s decision about not renewing VMware‘s license agreement for server virtualization, UDS Enterprise & Nutanix Acropolis integration and Free Software Foundation 30th anniversary.
Find below the links to our top 3 posts according to our followers just in case you didn’t have the chance to read them yet:
Virtual machines live migration is a really interesting topic regarding virtualization, since guests continue growing (more CPUs, more RAM) and uptime demands are the same and long pauses between virtual machines migrating from one host to another are not expected.
Reading the article below, you’ll learn how to perform a live migration with QEMU/KVM hypervisor. In addition, the post includes interesting information about the early days, present and future of this hypervisor; paying special attention to the updates, optimization and the constant changes required in the design to meet the demands of the community.
In our post today we explain how to deploy and create KVM virtual machines under Red Hat based distros, such as RHEL, CentOS7 and Fedora 21.
First of all, you should make sure that the system has the necessary hardware virtualization extensions or that such extensions are enabled in the BIOS and that the KVM modules are loaded in the kernel.
Then, you should install packages qemu-kvm and qemu-img. These packages provide the disk image manager and the KVM user level.
The VDI architecture used by the University of Sevilla, the improvements in Citrix XenServer Workload Balancing an the new mobile virtual infrastruture have been the top 3 topics in our blog during the last two weeks.
Find below the links to these posts and have a look at them to find out why our followers have found them so interesting:
Our analysis about KVM hypervisor management tools and the cost savings by migrating from a desktop virtualization platform with vSphere to another with oVirt have been the most read articles in our blog during the first half of December.
Below you can find the links to these 3 posts so you don’t lose track of the most outstanding information according to our followers:
In previous publications we talked about oVirt and Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization, and today we finish our series of articles about KVM hypervisor management tools talking about OpenStack thanks, once again, to this interesting article by vMiss.net.
If we throw a glance at the matrix support of OpenStack hypervisor, we can see that the only set of drivers tested in Group A is libvirt with KVM, which means that these drivers have been deeply tested and are fully supported. Bearing in mind the warm welcome to OpenStack by the Open Source community, this fact is not surprising at all.
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