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Def : "NvRAM" - Non-Volatile-Random-Access-Memory ...
the 'e-disk' you now find in every laptop and oft
even desktops these days. Most commonly "M2" but
the tech can be put in other things/formats. First
saw one in the Asus EEEPC as the main 'drive'.
>I prefer KVM/libvirt/virt-manager. Virtualbox needs out of tree kernel>
modules, which can be a hassle during upgrades. I don't agree on the
flexibility point. Virtualbox caters more for the novice user because
its GUI is a bit more polished.
KVM is perfectly good - UNTIL you want to maybe ENLARGE
a virtual disk. Then you've gotta edit config files and
do some other weird stuff.
Resize the LV the virtual disk resides on and the VM will behave as if
you exchanged the disk with a new one.
With VBox its just sliding
a control and VBox does the rest.
With KVM ??? No, you have to make two edits in the
main config file.
This doesn't parse. KVM has been integral part of the mainline Linux>
kernel tree for a decade while VBox still requires out-of-tree
Modules.
Ummm ... not always - the last place I used KVM was
a Debian, "Buster" I think. It DID install a KVM
optimized kernel - which SCREWED UP. Had to go
back to the previous kernel and nuke KVM.
Stupid question: Is there a difference between VirtualBox and VBox?>
Of course - entirely different code. The ENDS are kinda
the same, and kinda equally achieved. As Oracle could
get all greedy someday, I'm happy KVM & Xen are out there.
>Hey, if you've got a hot i9 with gobs of ram then lots
of usable VMs are kinda the logical step.
I am running five server VMs on a machine with 4 Gig of RAM. My "big"
virtualization server has 32 Gigs and runs 22 VMs, with more than 10
Gig free to use for disk cache. So the "gobs of RAM" is lore from two
decades ago, any decently modern machine can handle a handful Linux
VMs just fine.
4 gig ? DO-able, but kinda TIGHT. The 32g unit ought to
be better. As for "gobs" ... depends on WHAT you're running
on the VMs. Some apps/servers are more memory-intensive
than others ... ArcGIS for example.
Anyway, mem is still fairly cheap, so why buy 4g when 8g
barely costs any more ?
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