Cockpit-Machine - Can it Replace Virt-Manager?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 51

  • @CyberGizmo
    @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Due to the recent RedHat announcement, I am retracting the video, and ending all use of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, for development. To that end, I can no longer recommend using Cock Pit, I invite you to watch my next video explaining this direction

    • @ultravioletiris6241
      @ultravioletiris6241 ปีที่แล้ว

      Interesting. I currently use Proxmox and have barely gotten used to it. VirtualBox was more intuitive for me, but i needed a real hypervisor and didnt like the way that Hyper-V works. I liked the simple UI of Cockpit but I do a lot of hardware passthrough stuff and that tends to work best with Proxmox.

    • @luigitech3169
      @luigitech3169 ปีที่แล้ว

      I've seen both videos, yeah but Proxmox Web UI isn't docker compatible by default, so what do you suggest ? proxmox + portainer ?

  • @maciej-36
    @maciej-36 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    Cockpit is very limited especially if you doing GPU passthrough or other none standard stuff than you have to go back to editing xml files by hand. I hope community will keep virt-manager alive. It's the best graphical tool for quickly creating virtual machines available.

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      so far they are although its been awhile since its been touched (Aug 2022)

    • @NOPerative
      @NOPerative ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Based on what you've said reasonable expectation would be that VirtMan will remain in contention until it is no longer relevant which would require that cockpit addresses VirtMan functionality; VirtMan will probably still persist well after cockpit becomes comparably comprehensive most likely getting updates itself bringing it inline with cockpit before it would be dropped and that deprecation would most likely be exclusive to the UI aspects (presentation and management). I wouldn't get to worried about VirtMan prevalence diminishing just yet.

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@NOPerative No doubt, I see this a lot today with people adapting what is essentially command line interface driven configuration like KVM/QEMU, the folks who did virt-manager put most of that into the GUI, the cockpit-machine folks have about...ohhh maybe 30% of it in the GUI and the rest back out to the command line, now that doesn't bother me, I live in the command line, but for others that would be a serious limitation, and I can see that.

    • @terrydaktyllus1320
      @terrydaktyllus1320 ปีที่แล้ว

      GPU passthrough isn't virtualisation anyway - it's purely a "kludge" to keep self-entitled Linux gamer-brats happy.

    • @maciej-36
      @maciej-36 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@CyberGizmo I use command line a lot , virsh is an excellent tool. However what is the point of the GUI tool if you're forced to fallback into CLI anyway? I often see people using virtual box on linux desktop probably don't even knowing about virt-manager. Virt-manager is a real gem. it was used as an real life example when Microsoft enabled GUI applications in WSL2 and people were asking why do you need this functionality anyway.

  • @jeppebuk
    @jeppebuk ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thanks for a good introduction to cockpit as a front end for qemu/kvm virtualization 👍🏻 Would be interesting with a walkthrough of setting up a Debian 12 virtualization server with good storage setup, bridged networking to virtual machines and spice remote viewer. Perhaps test if cockpit can be used for all (most) of the setup? 😊

  • @attainconsult
    @attainconsult ปีที่แล้ว +1

    oh great have used the old virt-man UI for years this is just what I needed

  • @LLPOF
    @LLPOF ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You are a true gem of the internet.

  • @simmo1024
    @simmo1024 ปีที่แล้ว

    Useful. Will be rebuilding my home infrastructure next year, and I admit I wasn't looking forward to setting up virt-manager again - now I don't have to worry, looks like this will make it easy. There will be some containerisation too when I do, so looking forward tot he podman vid too.

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว

      There will be more videos coming, some of the more advanced stuff which is handled by Proxmox is left up to a journey to the command line, but thanks I am glad you enjoyed the video

  • @erichartel2401
    @erichartel2401 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I was looking for a virtmanager replacement. I ended up with LXD, their VM Support got really good and and the cli is really good

    • @egzakharovich
      @egzakharovich 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I would have taken that approach too, but I hate that "client TLS certificate for authentication" thing. Which is very, very limiting the remote administration. Unless it's sticking out right in the internet, but if you're using reverse proxy...

    • @Henry-sv3wv
      @Henry-sv3wv 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you mean incus

  • @bertnijhof5413
    @bertnijhof5413 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Cockpit looks better than the techno jargon in Virt-Manager, on the other hand IBM/Red Hat is unreliable with respect to the support for their products (virt-manager & Red Hat Linux). I use Virtualbox, since its time in Sun Microsystems (2009) and I never had a reason to move to another hypervisor. Oracle took over in Jan 2010 from Sun. Oracle is a reliable company, because they keep improving and maintaining their products, unlike IBM/Red Hat. My oldest VM (Windows XP Home) is installed and activated in March 2010 and I still use it every week! Which 13 year's old installation do you still use?
    By the way I collected ~70 VMs, all Windows releases from 1987 (1.04) till 2022 (11 Pro) and all Ubuntu LTS releases and many other Linux distros (somewhat old and new); FreeBSD; MS-DOS; DR-DOS and OS/2 Warp :) :)

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Just one problem with Virtualbox, its Intel/AMD ONLY, no support for RISC-V or ARM

  • @oso2k
    @oso2k 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Would be great if you could cover VM migration

  • @savirien4266
    @savirien4266 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Funny you brought up this subject. I have been struggling to get cockpit-machines working properly on any distro that supports it. What I want to do is make alma my base/host system, and run truenas core as a vm with my hba card as a passthrough. The install goes great, but I can't get the installed system to boot at all. Has anyone had a similar experience?

  • @GodEmperorSuperStar
    @GodEmperorSuperStar ปีที่แล้ว

    It's important to realize that virt-manager depreciation started in 2020

  • @VishnuVardhanS
    @VishnuVardhanS ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Any reason for leaving Proxmox? Does RHEL going close source make you question this choice?
    Thanks for the insightful content.

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I saw that notice this morning, RedHat continues to open mouth and insert foot. At the moment I am testing cockpit-machines to see how well it works, I guess there is always vagrant....:). Oh, there is nothing I dislike about Proxmox, just running out of steam on the box its hosted on

  • @ir0nmarshmallow85
    @ir0nmarshmallow85 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    With the price of VMWare going the way it has, I highly suspect this will become a popular tool for Linux users.

  • @peterjansen4826
    @peterjansen4826 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I dislike having to use the browser for the VM, for me that is clumsy because I already have the browser open for other pages, often 2 or 3 instances (one extra ordinary and one private) of Firefox.

    • @vipvip-tf9rw
      @vipvip-tf9rw ปีที่แล้ว +2

      it's for headless

    • @entelin
      @entelin ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vipvip-tf9rw it can launch browser based vnc connections as well. Cockpit has some nice things, but it's definitely not viable as a standalone tool nor comparable to a more fleshed-out system. A closer comparison would be something like truenas scale, which also has a pretty basic but functional gui front end. Regardless of how you bring virtual machines to life, I don't think anyone would actually use the virtual machines tool to use them day to day, there's ssh, rdp, vnc, etc for that.

  • @alexstone691
    @alexstone691 ปีที่แล้ว

    I used to have a debian server running kvm vms on which i worked remotely and its pretty good, used it extensively and had no need to use a monitor
    On debian i used it from backports which is a bit a pain, but still very very useful and even works on mobile

  • @dustee2680
    @dustee2680 ปีที่แล้ว

    I want to explore more options besides proxmox but i dont know if the features proxmox offers and does well out of the box can be so easily replaced, like clustering, ceph, live migrations, incremental backups with PBS, etc..

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That is essentially what I am doing, Proxmox is a very good platform for virtual machines and LXC containers, my only reason for looking is I am running out of host machine resources and I don’t want to dedicate another x86 machine to Proxmox

  • @christopherjackson2157
    @christopherjackson2157 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I really like xcp-ng as a hypervisor. It handles some things exceptionally well.
    But.... It's not very user friendly. I'm not comfortable using it in production. Easy to misconfigure, and sometimes beyond my ability to repair.

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I used xcp-ng quite awhile until one upgrade where it blew itself up, destroyed all the VMs and even corrupted the backups, my fault for not performing the upgrade correctly but I agree it can be very confusing at times,

    • @christopherjackson2157
      @christopherjackson2157 ปีที่แล้ว

      I have a real love/hate relationship with it lol

  • @terrydaktyllus1320
    @terrydaktyllus1320 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why is it that when I just get used to a particular user interface, someone decides to change it?
    "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" - and virt-manager "ain't broke".

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว

      Its still around, just not on RHEL 8 and above

  • @derekfarealz
    @derekfarealz ปีที่แล้ว +1

    is there a way to handle lxc in cockpit without the need to use proxmox?

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I think so, I saw some configuration notes in the guide for LXC

  • @old486whizz
    @old486whizz ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I tried to use Cockpit for the virtual machines a while ago and couldn't get it working.. it couldn't see any of the machines, while "virsh list" worked and everything..
    Dammit.. they're removing the great virt-manager, the thing that works quickly, smoothly etc.. then replaces it with a backwards website rubbish cockpit.. God damn it IBM, stop this!!

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      RedHat is just deprecating it for RHEL, the virt-manager project is still being maintained by the community so no worries so far. That's the nice thing about open source, someone does something stupid, we fork it :)

  • @elalemanpaisa
    @elalemanpaisa 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    why not XCP-NG?

  • @skolarii
    @skolarii ปีที่แล้ว

    doesn't clustering servers require a license?

    • @CyberGizmo
      @CyberGizmo  ปีที่แล้ว

      on proxmox? the HA part yes, the clustering part no

  • @XRPSAINT
    @XRPSAINT 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Please do a more in depth review/tutorial. I am thinking about moving from proXmoX too :)