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Hi all
Im a sysadmin for 5 years at a property firm. We use XEN server and I love it and use it at home too. Ive been following this project since inception and cant believe how much it grew and at the rate it did. I am VERY interested in moving our hosts to this platform in future due to Citrix' new view on free users. Thanks for all the hard work guys its amazing what you are doing.
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Hi I'm a SysAdmin/NOC Admin from Boston, MA. One of our customers referred me to this site requesting migrating their Pool to XCP NG due to the path Citrix is taking. Very pleased to see this project in the works.
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I have been in IT for 20 years and have worked with ESXi for a fair amount of that time then recently started looking into open source alternatives. I have tried using Xen in the past (4 years ago) with mixed results. I have more recently also tried UNRAID which worked quite well however there is no real commercial support due to the nature of the product being more domestic. Then by chance I was skimming through youtube and came accross a video of XCP-ng (2 months ago) I have now transferred all of my infrastructure over and am currently looking at transferring all my customers with ESXi over as well. This is a great product keep up the good work.
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Thanks for the feedback @asbtech
If you are looking for pro support option you can take a look right here: https://xcp-ng.com/
We are aiming XCP-ng to be usable by companies in production environment as well as homelab -
@marc-pezin Thanks very much for that once I have started to do some implementations here in Australia I will be in contact.
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Good day to all!
I have been testing Xen server since version 6 using 3 old i7 desktop PCs in my lab and they are working fantastically well. Too bad v7 onwards Citrix disabled the most important features for the free edition so I stopped using it. Am excited that this project is launched!
Regards,
Ken -
hi there.
I'm senior engineer.
I work as a sysadmin for about 25 years (and all you can imagine related to computers) in a town hall, city is about 30.000 citizen.I started using vmware 4.0, from there we migrate to XenServer 6.5 from there to 7.1. Then once I saw the magic movement of Citrix towards 7.3 and its limits I began to study alternatives.
Basically I was goint to oVirt (Red Hat virtualization open source community solution), and then appeared XCP-ng and I also began to study it.
We have two remote CPD, and in one of them I have the testing machines (3 servers + fibre channel storage), on that one I'm testing XCP-ng 7.4.1 and also XenOrchestra which provides a huge functionality and add-ons to XCP-ng (or XenServer) that are really useful (for example backup-ng).
So, for those advantages I will try to keep on XCP-ng, because it has XO, I don't have to do a lot of VM migration, due XenServer and XCP-ng are 99% identical, and also the community and the professionals, they always try to help you and the software and its characteristics are always evolving and getting better.
I have to way that I really excited about 7.5 XCP-ng because I think is going to be the path to follow.
well, thats all !
thanks for all.
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Good morning everyone.
I'm a complete beginner to servers and virtualization. I'm putting together a FreeNAS box and in the meantime playing with a test installation of it in VirtualBox (my only exposure to virtualization so far). It was in watching tutorials on FreeNAS that I came across XCP-NG and became intruiged. My biggest question is, "Why XCP-NG over VirtualBox?" (for my home setup). I currently have an older desktop running Manjaro Linux... then use VirtualBox to run standalone operating systems and tools within it. It seems silly that I have to install a full OS to then install VirtualBox... to then install the various other test OSs. I think it why XCP-NG would be beneficial in this state. Still just learning, and I'm sure the answer is in this forum. Have a great day!
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Welcome to our last community members!
@r0b0ty XCP-ng is a great way to "train" yourself on enterprise-grade virtualization software. It's very similar to ESXi and Hyper-V. If you want to learn a bit more on how Xen works (Xen is the "virtualization" engine inside XCP-ng) you can check this:
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Hi, everyone. Nice to see this project turning into reality. I will try to spend time here as possible, which is hard with already being spread thinly. I've been a XenServer user for around a decade and am as interesting in learning as well as contributing whatever knowledge might be helpful to the community.
Best regards,
-=Tobias -
Yaaay! Welcome @tjkreidl !!!
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@tjkreidl Hey! I saw your profile picture many times in the XenServer forum Welcome!
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@tjkreidl is a real legend there
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@tjkreidl Hearty welcome to the community. We look forward for your insights and expert advises. Cheers
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@tjkreidl - Fab to see the post today .. seriously good news!
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haha is not just a legend inside Citrix forum but even already here
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@tjkreidl said in Introduce yourself!:
Hi, everyone. Nice to see this project turning into reality. I will try to spend time here as possible, which is hard with already being spread thinly. I've been a XenServer user for around a decade and am as interesting in learning as well as contributing whatever knowledge might be helpful to the community.
Best regards,
-=TobiasWOW!
We have Tobias joining our community! -
Hi all,
I am using XenServer ON and OFF for a couple of years now. For current setup, it's our main hypervisor for Apache Cloudstack Based cloud. As ACS is orchestrator, I hardly need to touch anything at XS. But Since Citrix recent announcement about licensing, I was seriously planning for KVM. One of my friends suggested XCP-ng to me. Hence came here. I am planning to test this as soon as I get some time.
BTW, I believe XCP-NG 7.4 is compatible with ACS 4.11.1, right?
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Hi @Logik and welcome!
Cloudstack support should work since the compatibility was added during April: https://github.com/apache/cloudstack/issues/2523
I can't tell for the exact integration in Cloudstack itself, you should take a look.
Note: we are at XCP-ng 7.5 today
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I am a complete noob with Xen, although I've been a VirtualBox user for a decade. I was given a project at work and Xen was suggested as a solution. I worked through Fedora 28 (no joy), Debian 9.5.0 (workie but clunky), XenServer (a sledgehammer to kill a gnat and the giant does not want to let go), and then found XCP-ng...
Still getting my brain wrapped around the possibilities.
The vGPU feature is near and dear to my heart. I have release-vs-hardware issues with GPUs all of the time and this looks like it might be a way to be more productive in my troubleshooting. Haven't shot anything yet, but looking forward to it.