if you mean Veeam, it's no longer a russian corporation.
USA it's not a dictatorship.
if you mean Veeam, it's no longer a russian corporation.
USA it's not a dictatorship.
If that were true there wouldn't be any new features coming in the next release of Windows Server, especially the ones that are Hyper-V specific (that are currently Azure Stack HCI-only) https://redmondmag.com/articles/2023/12 ... vnext.aspxOmiFreak wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 2:29 pm HV is not an alternative for me that I would like to start over with now. Microsoft is no longer interested in on-premises products, there is no significant further development of HV.
Proxmox also feels like it has been treading water for a long time, maybe the problems with VMware and encouragement from people desperately looking for a VMware alternative could make a difference.
If Oracle is the best alternative for software that has become too expensive, it should be clear how serious the situation is.
Bernd
Just curious James, are you really not affected by any of these issues?
To be fair, I only hate Hyper-V because I've used it in every one of its iterations, from long ago - 2003, until the latest version 2022. Including cluster deployments and iterations such as Azure Pack and Azure Stack.JamesNT wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 4:02 pm For those of you hating on Hyper-V, I have noticed that many who hate on it are using their experience from the Windows Server 2008 days or even the Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 days to justify that hate. Whether this applies to any of you is unknown. However, I would nonetheless encourage you to setup a new 2019/2022 Hyper-V server and give it a run.
This isn't true. They support RHV and Nutanix as well. But, I think most features are only in VMW and HV
I apologize for the lack of clarification. What I was stating was of the 3 HV's I was talking about (Xen, VMWare, and Hyper-V), Veeam supports VMWare and Hyper-V. I hope that clears up my comment. Please let me know if there are any questions.coolsport00 wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 7:40 pm This isn't true. They support RHV and Nutanix as well. But, I think most features are only in VMW and HV
TrueNAS Scale is one that we're looking at as well, but it would mean a move away from Veeam (I'm not a huge fan of installing agents within the VM's for backup) which is why it's not higher on our list. If Veeam was able to support it, that may change its ranking for us.nitramd wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 7:06 pm Another option is TrueNAS Scale sponsored by IXSystems: https://www.truenas.com/truenas-scale/ ; this platform is Hyperconverged storage with KVM ability.
The underlying OS is Debian and TrueNAS uses ZFS as the underlying filesystem I believe.
Here's a link to the virtualization section of their documentation: https://www.truenas.com/docs/scale/scal ... onscreens/
Great posts everyone. I've been watching this merger with a wary eye.
Hotpatching is great news. However if it will require Azure Arc then Im not so sure about it. And depending on pricing also.nmdange wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 4:36 pm If that were true there wouldn't be any new features coming in the next release of Windows Server, especially the ones that are Hyper-V specific (that are currently Azure Stack HCI-only) https://redmondmag.com/articles/2023/12 ... vnext.aspx
used it many years ago on single server sites, really simple stuff. I use it on my PC at home I manage windows servers day to day so would probably be less workload for me overall, famous last words I also manage all the other infrastructure as well so I'm across all the networking and storage etc, so no drama dealing with those teamscoolsport00 wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 1:19 pm @nathano - have you used HV recently?...ever?...or, just looking to begin a switchover now? What's your experience with it? Like you, we don't use many features with VMW. DRS & some affinity/anti-affinity rules, VMotion, SVMotion, and that's pretty much it. Big features for us though. No vSAN, NSX, Aria, SRM, Replication, etc.
HV is in server 2022 https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windo ... ows-server that's what I'm currently spinning up for testing and a refresher on HVvirtualguru wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 10:54 pm Server 2019 is the last version to include hyper-v. Microsoft's future is Azure Stack HCI.
I think your were just a very lucky guy then. We run our own datacenter on Hyper-V since more then 6 years now. Quite a few hosts and >700 VMs. We started with HV2012 and are on 2019 atm. Years back, we had to replace all the NICs in our HPE proliant hosts two times because of incompatiblities with Hyper-V. With the actual Gen10 hosts, we have problems again as they crash out of nothing because of VMQ/RSS failures. Already had cases with Microsoft premier support for months. No solution so far. This is not the only issue we had. I guess we basically run into every single issue that occured with Hyper-V so far. The RCT I/O problem that Gostev was referencing was known at MS for almost 3 years! As far as i know, it was easily reproducable in pretty much every installation with a little higher load and it took them 3 years to fix it!JamesNT wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 5:12 pm @Gostev,
No, I have not had those issues. And I have a client with an Exchange 2019 server on prem and I have several SQL Servers not to mention one law firm with a Hyper-V cluster in the main office and servers in 5 branch offices all doing DFS and SQL Server Replication. I didn't even know about those issues until just now.
James
From what I've seen so far, I really like it (Proxmox). With Ceph integrated, it can basically do what our VMware/VSAN cluster does, and more. On a personal view it feels more natural, as it's closer to managing the standard linux boxes I'm used to. Added benefit is that it's using the same hypervisor (KVM) I'm familiar with from using on my desktop anyway.
No, haven't experienced this yet. Are there more details under which circumstances this could be happening? Basically, hot/live backups work the same way as in the Vmware case - freeze, snapshot, thaw. Afterwards you got a crash-consistent backup, not much different from how Veeam does it in our VMware-setup.coolsport00 wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 1:19 pm ..
If Proxmox has potential VM corruption issues with backup..hmm...then not sure how that can even be a possibility for anyone now, other than lab'ing. Maybe engineers for them can get that taken care of soon. May still at least give it a glance. @hobbit - have you had any VM corruption issues in your testing?
..
I find the setup, especially failover clustering not as clear or intuitive to setup in Hyper-V. Now granted, as noted by others, most of my experience with Hyper-V was from 2008 - 2016, but some it still feels kind hacked together at times. I also find that it's really easy to store VM's....wrong? Inconsistently? Almost every Hyper-V environment I walk into has some VM's stored in one location, others in another, some VM's using a specific folder, some using a subfolder under that folder, etc. I'm also concerned about Microsoft moving away from premise computing as they focus on Azure, or focus on rolling out on-premise software with the intent of funneling you to Azure. It's not bad, but it's also not ideal. VMware historically has just done a really good job of standardizing deployments, making things pretty clear overall, and just baking a lot of reliability into their products. Not to say that there haven't been issues (such as ESXI 7 update 2). I'm also sure that if I spent more time with Hyper-V, I'd be more comfortable with it, but I'm still not sure it's the right product going forward.coolsport00 wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 7:40 pm It would be nice to see a post of what Sys Architects/Engrs find "wrong" or "bad" about HV vs VMW.
I experienced the same which is why I ended up writing scripts to create VM's with proper placement . Once we leveraged scripts for automation, these types of issues went away. We scripted the entire process from setting up hosts, creating clusters, storage, networking, creating VM's, etc. to minimize these types of scenarios and errors that arise from manually using the GUI to set up each one. To me, that's a good direction regardless of the HV being used though. Again, just my $.02.
It's buggy and not production ready. imo, this would be wasted resource.janschulenburg wrote: ↑Jan 22, 2024 11:37 am XCP is new to me but I would vote for this too. any alternative for VMware would be welcome!
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