Hi,
Dan Yasny schreef op 6-2-2014 16:38:
This is the same question as in RHEL or Fedora IMO: do you want the
bleeding edge features and lower code stability and reliability, or do
you want to have techsupport (and that means a real SLA and an
escalation path up to the engineering, if need be) behind you, stable
and reliable, well tested code, but less of the advanced features.
Thank you, this is what I thought.
It's still a hard decision. If the stability and "testedness" of RHEL is
anything to go by, it's not reassuring at all (although it may be better
than Fedora, I don't know), although I must say that RedHat support is
helpful at times.
Thanks again, I think I know enough :-)
Best regards,
Martijn Grendelman
On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 8:06 AM, Martijn Grendelman
<martijn.grendelman(a)isaac.nl <mailto:martijn.grendelman@isaac.nl>> wrote:
Hi,
This may be the wrong place to ask, but I'm looking for input to form an
opinion on an "oVirt or RHEV" question within my company.
I have been running oVirt for about 5 months now, and I'm quite
comfortable with its features and maintenance procedures. We are now
planning to build a private virtualization cluster for hosting clients'
applications as well as our own. Some people in the company are
questioning whether we should buy RHEV, but at this point, I can't see
the benefits.
Can anyone on this list shed a light on when RHEV might be a better
choice than oVirt? What are the benefits? The trade-offs?
I am looking for pragmatic, real-world things, not marketing mumbo
jumbo. That, I can get from
redhat.com <
http://redhat.com> ;-)
Best regards,
Martijn.
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