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Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS



Noah,

Let me just play devils advocate here. I think this is an interesting topic to discuss and I'd like to get other people's opinion on it. It seems like the main advantage of what you are trying to accomplish with VMs in this situation is administrative. Why would running a different VM OS instance for each dept be better technically than just loading up the server with more users? You don't need a new OS instance to add 15 more AFP/SMB accounts, in fact the overhead of doing so is probably much higher than just assigning each dept a share on a server that isn't virtualized and then assigning them rights to manage it. (Assuming the server has capacity) Thoughts?

Aaron


On May 9, 2008, at 3:21 PM, Noah Abrahamson wrote:


On May 9, 2008, at 10:55 AM, Josh Wisenbaker wrote:

Outside of test, dev, and QA environments I don't see a lot of market actually. Mac OS X Server scales well enough to fully utilize a box. At that point splitting it isn't the solution, adding more hardware is.

One of the tests that I'm doing is whether MOSX server VMs might be something we could offer to university departments who may, due to costs, be choosing to run their own server (minus the professional administration from IT central services, which costs considerably). We are exploring offering a MOSXS VM to a department, where we manage the host Xserve, house it in our climate controlled, secure space, but give their department full access to their VM. We could optionally provide admin/monitoring services for a reduced rate since we don't have to make cross-campus trips to their location. They don't have to buy new hardware or energy. For central services wishing to provide this service, deployment could be rapid, since a prefab/preconfigured VM may already be at hand. And it's space saving, which is important (at least on this campus). We're thinking this might be ideal for departments that have, say, under 15 concurrent users who are mainly interested in AFP and possibly SMB and Web, but little more. It would be much cheaper for them to buy a VM.




Noah


------------------- Noah Abrahamson Stanford University


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References: 
 >Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: Amedeo Mantica <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: William Strucke <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: Dave Schroeder <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: Peter Clark <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: David Colville <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: Josh Wisenbaker <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Parallels Server supports OSX Server as Guest OS (From: Noah Abrahamson <email@hidden>)



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