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On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 9:54 AM, <markw-FJ05HQ0HCKaWd6l5hS35sQ at public.gmane.org> wrote: > I have a couple servers in a cambridge colocation, they are rapidly > approaching 10 years old. Needless to say, its time to upgrade. > > I currently have 2 dual PIII 800 MHZ each with a gig of ram. I am looking > to replace them with two quad-core AMD AthlonII with 8 gigs of ram. (Total > cost for both motherboads, memory and CPU is $600!!! unbelievable!) > > I think I want to set it up a small cloud system. Rather than setup two > machines, one as a database server and the other as a mass-web host, (like > I currently have) I think I want to be more creative. > > Keep one as a raw machine that runs the databases, as disk I/O is dog slow > on virtualized hardware, and on the other make it a host a host machine on > which I'll run a one or more virtual machines doing the web and service > hosting. (If there is enough bandwidth, I may run VMs on the database > machine as well) > > The the thing I want to discuss... > > Are there any "good" vm tools out there that makes this easy. I'm using > VMPlayer and not sure I want to use it. I'd like a command line text > system as these will be remote servers and a GUI is painful remotely. > > Any ideas? Suggestions? > > This doesn't answer your question about VM's, but if your looking to build a cloud, you might want to checkout Eucalyptus; http://www.eucalyptus.com/ I believe support for Eucalyptus comes built-in with Ubuntu Karmic: http://www.ubuntu.com/cloud/private https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEC I have never used it but it looks promising. Anyone out there had any experience with Eucalyptus? -Chris
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