a though...
Frank Ramsay
fjr at marsdome.penguinpowered.com
Tue Jun 20 21:51:38 EDT 2000
While rebooting the laptop I got at work for the 10th time today (installing
software on Windows is such an adventure). I found myself wondering if anyone
was producing a thin distribution of Linux designed (and optimized) to act
only as a host to VMWare. It seems that a distribution like this, with a good
configuration tool (both for Linux and the VMs) would be a very good thing.
Obviously this would not be something for most home users, but I think there
might be compelling reasons to buy one really powerful system. By way of an
example: If you are building (x86 based) servers your likely to be buying Dual
Xenon(1) systems. Well if you could buy 1 8-way Xenon system in place of 4
dual Xenon systems it would probably save a considerable amount of money. Not
to mention the space savings (always an issue in the computer room) and
stability, _if_ a server crashes you don't have to cycle the machine, only the
VM. Of course you would start to run into things like the 4 gig memory limit
with the 32bit architecture but I think it is an interesting concept.
I only mention it to see what other people think.
1 - I know that VMWare only supports 1 CPU per VM right now, this is just
speculation.
-fjr
--
Frank J. Ramsay
fjr at marsdome.penguinpowered.com
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