On Tuesday, 03-12-2024 at 21:04 jeremy ardley wrote:
On 3/12/24 16:49, George at Clug wrote:
I would also recommend the free version of VMware Workstation. While not
FOSS, it is an excellent product, while it is made available for
personal use
No it's not! VMware Workstation is a buggy as hell on Windows and nearly unusable on Debian.
I know. I've just spent a year in a virtualisation course using VMWare Workstation to virtualise many different hosts and networks and applications.
On a Windows Host it will randomly forget to cut and paste to a VM. At
times it will go to 100% CPU and wedge. Sometimes the only solution is
to completely reboot the Windows host.
With VMWare workstation on Windows, the course instruction is "Save
Early, Save Often"
They don't even attempt to do coursework on Linux for a very good reason.
I have used VMware Workstation on Windows PCs for about 15 years, and VMware Player.
I have used VMware Workstation on Linux for about 5 years. And still do, but only for the better graphics. I mostly use KVM now, via Virt-Manager.
I first learnt how to do Live Migration using two virtualised ESXi hypervisors using VMware Workstation on Windows 7. I now use Virt-Manager and KVM to demonstrate Live Migration.
I have enjoyed virtualising Windows 95 through to Windows 10 on VMware Workstation just for the fun.
Never have I had any issues. Worked perfectly for me.
Your experience might be different (obviously from your comments).
I have also use Virtual Box, and quite like it too.
I have never implemented GPU passthrough. Not even sure how to pass a GPU through.
For my personal virtualisation tasks I use QEMU/KVM and the debian gui tools.
I agree, I particularly like using Virt-Manager for QEMU/KVM. Simple to use and I don't need to install a management "endpoint" on remote KVM servers to manage them.
They take a bit of learning but are far more reliable than VMWare.
I certainly have found KVM and Virt-Manager to be reliable and stable for Linux servers. Never had any issues (other than of my own making ; )
Using Virt-Manager really makes things easy. I don't bother doing command line KVM unless manually moving/copying VMs.
As an aside, VMWare Workstation Pro is now free because Broadcom has
upped the license fee on ESXi systems and are facing a mammoth exodus of customers to other vendors. Free software is a last ditch effort to
increase the user base.
I was disappointed when Broadcom took over VMware. I had not heard about the ESXi licence fees increasing, sad. I had thought that Broadcom had ended ESXi, it is good to know at least it is still alive, but I am concerned that maybe they are not funding
development, which might be why you have found it has become unstable? I do not use VMware Workstation very much over the past four year. No need to as KVM works great.
I had heard that Red Hat may stop supporting Spice in KVM leaving VNC as the alternative? Have you heard about this? I hope it is not going to happen, Spice has been great for video and sound in VMs. Spice with OpenGL enabled is how I test Cinnamon in
VMs without software rendering.
https://docs.redhat.com/en/documentation/red_hat_enterprise_linux/9/html/considerations_in_adopting_rhel_9/assembly_virtualization_considerations-in-adopting-rhel-9
SPICE has become unsupported
George.
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