One thing I missed...If you run Docker on Windows OS, you can run Linux Operating System along side the WIndows Host OS. The other thing is LXD/LXC will do scaling similar to the way Docker does it
Virt-Man is just a shell for QEMU which isnt going anywhere. You can learn to use it without the easy to use shell (Virt-Man) and do everything you normally would. In fact there are already other shells that work with QEMU to make it easier for people to create, modify Virtual Machines.
True TheLotw, and I have certainly used QEMU that way before, even used Vagrant to set them up and start them...just exploring all the options :). Thanks for the reminder there are other tools out there.
It;s a furthering more software in-front of the hardware. When I was ~16ish I hated managing interrupts and DMA IO blocks to the chip I just wanted to play games !
One thing I missed...If you run Docker on Windows OS, you can run Linux Operating System along side the WIndows Host OS. The other thing is LXD/LXC will do scaling similar to the way Docker does it
Much appreciated. Nice and high-throughput explanation.
Great lesson, looking forward to next video!
Thanks Tom
Excellent video and lots of info! Thank you for explaining the difference and resource utilization and how it all works. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
could lxd run any of the bsds or limited to just the linuxes?
Just got a subscriber! Thank you very much i relay the way you tech. looking forward..
Great explanation, really helpful.
Well explained, thanks DJ!
Great video indeed, many thanks for this, well done DJ!
abobader, thank you
Cockpit is the Virt Manager replacement I believe. It is a cross between Virt Manager and Webmin run from a web interface.
Virt-Man is just a shell for QEMU which isnt going anywhere. You can learn to use it without the easy to use shell (Virt-Man) and do everything you normally would. In fact there are already other shells that work with QEMU to make it easier for people to create, modify Virtual Machines.
True TheLotw, and I have certainly used QEMU that way before, even used Vagrant to set them up and start them...just exploring all the options :). Thanks for the reminder there are other tools out there.
@@CyberGizmo There is also Unicorn, aqemu, qtvirtmanager, kvirtual, qtemu, nemu, qemu-launcher, etc... but I havent tried them (yet).
Thanks for an entertaining video,
Don, glad you enjoyed it
Why not mention what Red Hat is replacing it with: cockpit and cockpit-machines, which is just a web ui around qemu/kvm?
Because cockpit doesnt run on all platforms yet, and its not as complete as virt-manager is
It;s a furthering more software in-front of the hardware. When I was ~16ish I hated managing interrupts and DMA IO blocks to the chip I just wanted to play games !
So true, sometimes we forget during the fog of getting everything to work, we just want to play the game :)
Thanks
Hey DJ, get a red hat...
lol