<html><head><style type='text/css'>p { margin: 0; }</style></head><body><div style='font-family: Arial; font-size: 10pt; color: #000000'><br><br>----- "Daniel Pittman" <daniel@rimspace.net> wrote:
<br><br>> <br>> KVM, which depends on having a processor with hardware support for<br>> virtualization, works well and is now the "official" option for Fedora,<br>> RHEL and Ubuntu, and is will supported in Debian.<br>> <br>> If I had to use a "pretend hardware" solution that is what I would<br>> choose.<br>> <br>><br>my 2c here...<br><br>KVM in my experience isn't quite ready for prime time - I've had issues with block I/O performance, network speeds and configuration, plus getting the CD/DVD drive to change while the guest is on have all contributed to my putting it in the 'great when it gets there' basket - the libvirt support wasn't quite ready when I tried it last (FC9, 2.6.25) - anyone tried a more recent version?<br><br>The RHEL support isn't there just yet, but is slated for RHEL6 from what I hear.<br></daniel@rimspace.net></div></body></html>