[TriLUG] Need opinions for specs of a VM box
OlsonE at aosa.army.mil
OlsonE at aosa.army.mil
Fri Jul 27 07:54:54 EDT 2007
David,
I'm using MSSQL 2000, and MSSQL 2005 on a VMWare ESX Server, and have no
issues.
-----Original Message-----
From: trilug-bounces at trilug.org [mailto:trilug-bounces at trilug.org] On
Behalf Of David McDowell
Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2007 5:50 PM
To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list
Subject: Re: [TriLUG] Need opinions for specs of a VM box
Your Oracle performs OK in a VM? what VM host are you using and what
size is your DB and how do you measure that performance? I ask b/c
there are a bunch of LUG'ers who are swearing no to DB's in a VM, but
with our small MSSQL implementation, I'm not so sure it's gonna be a big
deal.
David
On 7/26/07, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Thursday 26 July 2007 08:04, wayy2be wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I am wanting to purchase a desktop for my home that will be able
> > to handle running 4 or more VM's so that I can set up a network and
do labs.
> > Which route would be the best to go in terms of ram, hd space etc. I
> > need help with the specs. Thanks,
> >
> > Rob
> >
>
> Rob, as others have mentioned, it really depends on which VM's you are
> running.
>
> Here is our spec for our production VM Server:
>
> 8 GB Ram
> 2 Dual Core 3.0 Ghz Xeon Processors
> 4 300GB SCSI drives in a Raid 10
>
> We run the following VM's on a regular basis:
>
> Oracle Database VM - 3.6GB memory allocation
> SLED Desktop VM - 1.0GB memory allocation
> SLES-9 File / Print VM - 0.5GB memory allocation
> Debian TWiki VM - 0.2GB memory allocation
> SLES-9 VPN VM - 0.1GB memory Allocation
> SLES-9 CVS VM - 0.5GB memory Allocation
> Win2K Accounting VM - 0.2GB memory Allocation
> Kubuntu Test VM - 0.5GB memory Allocation
>
> And power on the a large number of other VM's (Win2K, WinXP, SLES-9,
> SLES-10,
> etc) as needed for testing.
>
> Load average on this box hovers between 2 and 3. Performance is very
> acceptable for all of the required applications.
>
> Hope this helps provide a real world example. If I have a fixed budget
> for a VM server, I would first make sure I have plenty of ram, and
> then spend my money on CPU, last would be disk space.
>
> Ron
>
>
>
>
>
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