Where's the post?olivierlambert wrote: ↑Apr 04, 2024 1:59 pm About SMAPIv3 and removing the 2TiB limitation: keep an eye open for a blog post next week![]()

Where's the post?olivierlambert wrote: ↑Apr 04, 2024 1:59 pm About SMAPIv3 and removing the 2TiB limitation: keep an eye open for a blog post next week![]()
Sorry I wasn't notified about your answer, there you go: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2024/04/19/firs ... n-preview/
@olivierlambert, without doxxing your customers- are you able to provide some examples of enterprise clients to help close the loop on this?Gostev wrote: ↑Jul 22, 2024 12:48 pm I was replying to the previous poster who was looking for a more enterprise-ready solution than Proxmox. I was never comparing those hypervisor to XCP-NG, which I know very little about. Nor do I know of any of Veeam customers who are using XCP-ng at enterprise scale.
However I do know of some good size RHV deployments including at some of the world's biggest brands, so oVirt KVM based virtualization does seem to work for the enterprise.
Interesting observation though: I noticed that your primary considerations are extremely "non-technical"... while in my opinion, technology and its maturity should go before anything else when talking about migration off of VMware?
SUSE is a Big Player in the virtualization space? That's news to me!SkyDiver79 wrote: ↑Apr 01, 2024 11:38 am I think Xen as Hypervisor has no Future. All Big Player, include SUSE have change to KVM.
With the build in Feature to migrate ESXi VMs to Proxmox, makes very easy to go KVM based virtualization.
By default Xen Orchestra selects the Realtek 8139 network adapter for VMs that you create. This is a 100Mbit adapter. That is why you're speed limited when booted from the Veeam recovery media. If you change to the Intel adapter on your VM, it will run 10x faster. Note that this doesn't make any difference at all once the OS is running correctly and PV drivers have been installed, as either Realtek or Intel will be replaced with the Xen PV adapter and run even faster again! There is probably a way to inject these PV drivers into the recovery media but I never bothered as the 1Gbit speed was acceptable at the time.
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