Sujet : Re: VMWARE/ESXi Linux
De : jgd (at) *nospam* cix.co.uk (John Dallman)
Groupes : comp.os.vmsDate : 28. Nov 2024, 20:30:29
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <memo.20241128193007.12904X@jgd.cix.co.uk>
References : 1
In article <
viacgn$kv9u$1@dont-email.me>,
arne@vajhoej.dk (Arne Vajh�j)
wrote:
But that is not how the enterprise IT world
look today. Today there are 3 possible setups:
1) public cloud
2) on-prem with containers either on bare metal
or on VM in very basic setup (because k8s and
other container stuff provide all the advanced functionality)
3) on-prem with traditional VM's
#1 is not ESXi as the big cloud vendors do not want
to pay and they want to customize. #2 does not need to
be ESXi as no advanced features are needed so any
virtualization is OK and ESXi cost. #3 is all that
is left for ESXi to shine with its advanced features.
My employers have a mixture of all three, with a lot of #3 for automated
software testing with confidential data. ESXi didn't come out with an
Aarch64 version fast enough, which got KVM into use, and now the plan is
to go all-KVM because Broadcom wants too much money all at once. But if
they hadn't done that, we'd have happily stayed with ESXi.
John