Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-05-30 Thread Mark Dokter
On 5/30/11 8:35 PM, Jorge Armando Medina wrote:
 On 03/30/2011 08:27 AM, Chuck Short wrote:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

 Regards
 chuck

 Hi there,
 
 Linus just accepted almost all the xen bits in 2.6.39+, this will allow
 Linux to run in Xen as Domain-0 and DomainU fully paravirtulized, more info:
 

I'd really like to see some more distribution support (especially
ubuntu) behind xen.
DomU support in natty is already *not so bad* and with a 2.6.40/3.0
kernel in oneiric the dom0 support shouldn't be much of a problem
either. Just the hypervisor that's missing...
I am using xen 4.1 packages on natty. They still have some rough edges
but if you know what you are doing they already work *not so bad* too :)
I put the packages online at [1]. They're basically a debian-unstable
remake.

[1]
https://launchpad.net/~dokter/+archive/xen-4.1

 
 Best regards.
 

cheers,

Mark

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-05 Thread Jorge Armando Medina
On 04/01/2011 06:05 PM, Raphaël Pinson wrote:
 On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 1:51 AM, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
 Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.
 Just playing devil's advocate here.

 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?

 Familiarity is a good reason I think, but also industry standards, and
 hardware considerations. I think a lot of big companies expect major
 distributions such as Ubuntu to provide a proper support for such a
 standard as Xen. I know it came as a disappointment for us that using
 Lucid as a (production) Xen dom0 was nearly impossible. Also, afair,
 KVM requires hardware support. Most recent machines provide it, but
 it's not rare to find servers that are too old to use it, and then
 you'd rather use Xen for servers than VMWare...

That is right, We have customers with big servers with lots of ram using
xen for paravirtulized machines, xen is a good product and we have
really good performance.

By the way, Xen is supported with the OpenStack.

Best regards.

 Raphaël



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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Soren Hansen
2011/4/3 Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com:
 Excerpts from Clint Byrum's message of Fri Apr 01 16:51:04 -0700 2011:
 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?
 Not one person has stood up and said that KVM blows Xen away, or is even
 better.

Um, no... because you didn't ask.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Clint Byrum
Excerpts from Soren Hansen's message of Mon Apr 04 01:40:39 -0700 2011:
 2011/4/3 Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com:
  Excerpts from Clint Byrum's message of Fri Apr 01 16:51:04 -0700 2011:
  Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
  compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?
  Not one person has stood up and said that KVM blows Xen away, or is even
  better.
 
 Um, no... because you didn't ask.
 

Fair enough.

Maybe we should ask though. Adding Xen back in means less resources for
KVM, so the KVM users' opinions matter quite a bit.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Soren Hansen
2011/4/2 Serge van Ginderachter se...@vanginderachter.be:
 On 2 April 2011 16:58, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
 Serge, would you mind elaborating on that? I'm looking for facts.

 I tested several virtualisation technologies last year.

I'm terribly sorry, but this information is practically useless. There
are no version numbers, no information about configuration, about
backing stores, disk image formats, cache settings, and very little
about hardware, etc. I can't e.g. tell if your factor 8 drop i
performance on Ubuntu for small writes is due to the virtual disk
being backed by a qcow2 on ext4, for instance, and as such, I can't
use the data (and much less the conclusions) for anything.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Chuck Short
On Mon, 04 Apr 2011 02:40:25 -0700
Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:

 Excerpts from Soren Hansen's message of Mon Apr 04 01:40:39 -0700
 2011:
  2011/4/3 Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com:
   Excerpts from Clint Byrum's message of Fri Apr 01 16:51:04 -0700
   2011:
   Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
   compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to,
   KVM?
   Not one person has stood up and said that KVM blows Xen away, or
   is even better.
  
  Um, no... because you didn't ask.
  
 
 Fair enough.
 
 Maybe we should ask though. Adding Xen back in means less resources
 for KVM, so the KVM users' opinions matter quite a bit.
 

I totally disagree with this. Adding Xen back would take little effort
to do so. 

Regards
chuck

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Serge van Ginderachter
On 4 April 2011 13:08, Michael Zoet michael.z...@zoet.de wrote:

  Maybe we should ask though. Adding Xen back in means less resources for
  KVM, so the KVM users' opinions matter quite a bit.

 In my opinion asking is some software better than another software is
 the wrong approach. KVM has advantages over Xen and Xen has advantages
 over KVM. It depends on a lot of factors which is an appropriate solution
 for a given task. Sometimes KVM wins and sometimes Xen and sometimes
 VMware and so on.


Ack. +1

KVM should not degraded in favor of Xen. Never!


At least not in the current state of things. One of the major advatages of
KVM is its stimplicity, and the fact it's in streamline Linux.
As I understood, as well in Debian as In ubuntu, the problem with Xen was
keeping it supported in more recent kernels, and managing the whole thing.

What SysAdmins need are options to choose from to fit the best in their
 networks. If Xen is available in the vanilla kernel a Xen kernel should be
 available. But never in favor of a good KVM support.


When Xen gets vanilla support for Dom0, it definitely could get some renewed
attention, and things need to be evaluated again.

It is the same for MTAs: we have among postfix exim, sendmail, qmail and a
 lot of other MTAs in the package repository. One MTA might work better for
 a given situation than the others.




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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Soren Hansen
2011/4/4 Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com:
 Maybe we should ask though. Adding Xen back in means less resources
 for KVM, so the KVM users' opinions matter quite a bit.

The very short version: I'm fine with Ubuntu getting Xen support again,
but I don't think it needs to be in main.

We chose KVM as our preferred, supported hypervisor a long time ago.
We've been telling people for years that it's what they should be using,
and lots of great effort has been put into the integration work. The
arguments against KVM were mostly about the hardware requirements, but
if we could live with that in 2007, I'd be surprised if we couldn't
today, since the percentage of server hardware that doesn't work with
KVM has severely declined.

Any decision will have supporters and opponents, and I firmly believe
that making a decision is the right thing to do. I believe there's a lot
of value (for everyone involved) in having firm answers to even tough
questions. Ubuntu, for instance, is a free operating system. No-one has
to ask over and over whether it's still free, because we've been very
clear from the beginning that that's how we roll. Similarly, you won't
find any closed-source applications on an Ubuntu CD. If you're wanting
to distribute closed source applications, don't bother asking if you can
put it on one of the Ubuntu CD's. No matter how popular your software
is, or how many people vote for it on a mailing list or on Ubuntu
Brainstorm, it's not going to happen. We're also not going to switch to
the FreeBSD kernel on a whim. Every decision we make defines us, whether
it's an additive or subtractive one. Every decision we fail to make,
weakens us.

When we chose KVM as our preferred hypervisor, it wasn't a decision to
use it in Hardy and revisit that decision every release following it
(that would have made it almost a non-decision). It wasn't a decision to
run this or that benchmark every 6 months, and whichever was in the lead
would be the preferred, supported hypervisor that we'd go out and
praise, and the rest would be deprecated until 6 months later when the
numbers would be slightly different.  We made the decision even though
KVM was still quite young, and none of the other major distros were
shipping it.  We made the decision to ship it, support it, stand behind
it, and help it grow.  Ubuntu's hypervisor was KVM.

I happily stand by that decision.

I believe KVM's design is superior.  KVM immediately benefits from
improvements made to the Linux kernel. If power management improves in
the Linux kernel, your KVM host's power management improves. If the
scheduler improves, KVM benefits. If memory management improves, KVM
benefits.

KVM is part of the Linux kernel, while Xen has its own kernel. I'm not
talking about the dom0, I'm talking about the Xen hypervisor on top of
which the dom0 and domU's run. This difference means that many
improvements in Linux need to be accommodated for or mimicked in Xen
before you get the benefits there[1]. To use KVM, you load a module that
turns your regular Linux kernel into a hypervisor. To run Xen, you boot
a completely different kernel on top of which you run a dom0. For the
most part, you don't see the difference, because distributors have put a
lot of work into making this change seamless, but effectively, you're
not running Linux anymore as your kernel. Anthony Liguori (one of the
KVM and QEmu developers) said it quite well[2]: The whole situation is
somewhat absurd though. It's like if the distributions shipped a NetBSD
kernel automatically and switched to using it when you wanted to run a
LAMP stack. Linux is a fine hypervisor on its own. It may not be
perfect, but I'd prefer we focus on identifying and fixing those issues

If someone thinks Xen is sufficiently cool, I'd encourage them to put
some effort getting it into shape in Ubuntu. I don't think we should
divert any of the existing attention on kvm/libvirt/friends to Xen. I
don't think we can afford it.


[1]: This page on power management with Xen is a good example:
 http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/xenpm

[2]: http://blog.codemonkey.ws/2008/05/truth-about-kvm-and-xen.html

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-04 Thread Michael Zoet

Am Mo, 4.04.2011, 13:34 schrieb Soren Hansen:
 2011/4/4 Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com:
 Maybe we should ask though. Adding Xen back in means less resources
 for KVM, so the KVM users' opinions matter quite a bit.

 The very short version: I'm fine with Ubuntu getting Xen support again,
 but I don't think it needs to be in main.


I think most people here think the same. Xen do not need to be in main.
Xen is only needed if there is a demand for a feature Xen has and KVM not.

And most people will agree in everything else you wrote in your mail. I
have several KVM and Xen server up and running and I think KVM will be (or
is, if you prefer ;-) ) the virtualisation technology for the future. But
sometimes an admin needs Xen for various reasons and then they get driven
away from Ubuntu for now. Something that is not so good for the wide
deployment of Ubuntu server.


Michael


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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-03 Thread Clint Byrum
Excerpts from Clint Byrum's message of Fri Apr 01 16:51:04 -0700 2011:
 Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:
  Hi,
  
  In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
  variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
  dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
  revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.
 
 Just playing devil's advocate here.
 
 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?
 

Really awesome feedback guys, and thanks for putting up with my tire
kicking on this idea.

So what I'm reading is that KVM should be good once hardware catches
up with it. Xen takes advantage of older hardware more effectively,
and may also have a better I/O system.

Not one person has stood up and said that KVM blows Xen away, or is even
better.

I have very little operational experience with either.. having had my
website and IMAP server on a Xen domU running CentOS 5 for a few years,
I can say that it is fine for the lightweight work of a wordpress blog
and courier-imap.

So, with all of that said, and xen dom0 support coming to the vanilla
kernel, it sounds like a slam dunk for Ubuntu to raise xen to first
class status.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-03 Thread Serge E. Hallyn
Quoting Serge van Ginderachter (se...@vanginderachter.be):
 On 2 April 2011 16:58, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:

 Some general conclusions were:
 
 * VMWare ESXi was the clear winner,
 * Xen on Debian Lenny was a close second, and the winner amongst Open
 Source solutions.
 * Xen performance is way better than KVM, especially when looking at disk
 access
 * Xen performs in a more stable and predictable way, whilst KVM seemed
 to perform more at random (which confirms Iustin's observations, )
 * CentOS (5.4) performed remarkably well for being older sofwtare
 versions (KVM, Xen, Linux kernel)
 * performance on Ubuntu was really bad. The then recent Ubuntu Lucid
 was far worse than CentOS 5.5 (both KVM)

On the one hand, you can't make claims like this without giving
very detailed info on the storage configuration.

On the other hand, kvm (and libvirt) tend to make changes which impact
how you need to tune things to get best performance.  Which is not
really acceptable in a real enterprise deployment.

We've gotten complaints before - valid IMHO - about 'undocumented
changes' like that.  This is IMO a strong consideration for considering
re-enabling xen.  It also may deserve a UDS topic on whethere there
is something we can do.  Perhaps we can spend a week around alpha-3
time doing performance tests of various configurations.  Perhaps we
can query the community for what they consider current best practices,
and document those at release time.  Perhaps query, then do our week
of performance tests to validate, then document.

-serge


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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Michael Zoet

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Am 02.04.2011 02:05, schrieb Raphaël Pinson:
 On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 1:51 AM, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
 Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:

 Just playing devil's advocate here.

 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?


 Familiarity is a good reason I think, but also industry standards, and
 hardware considerations. I think a lot of big companies expect major
 distributions such as Ubuntu to provide a proper support for such a
 standard as Xen. I know it came as a disappointment for us that using
 Lucid as a (production) Xen dom0 was nearly impossible. Also, afair,
 KVM requires hardware support. Most recent machines provide it, but
 it's not rare to find servers that are too old to use it, and then
 you'd rather use Xen for servers than VMWare...


I agree with that! Really big companies choose the things they know.
And if they have to switch the distro they do it.

Another advantage for Xen: it is more mature and easier to setup (at
least for me because I have only one configuration file I can change
with vim). Much more documentation around that works. You have much
more network options. And you can easily assign a hardware NIC to a VM
with Xen. With KVM this does not work on every hardware... (Now I have
2 15.000,- ? servers where I can not do the things with KVM I could
easily do with Xen. This was a pitty experience...)


Michael


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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Serge van Ginderachter
On 2 April 2011 01:51, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:

 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?



Performance.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Clint Byrum
Excerpts from Serge van Ginderachter's message of Sat Apr 02 02:17:29 -0700 
2011:
 On 2 April 2011 01:51, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
 
  Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
  compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?
 
 
 
 Performance.
 

Serge, would you mind elaborating on that? I'm looking for facts.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Clint Byrum
Excerpts from Michael Zoet's message of Sat Apr 02 01:20:36 -0700 2011:
 
 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1
 
 Am 02.04.2011 02:05, schrieb Raphaël Pinson:
  On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 1:51 AM, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
  Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:
 
  Just playing devil's advocate here.
 
  Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
  compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?
 
 
  Familiarity is a good reason I think, but also industry standards, and
  hardware considerations. I think a lot of big companies expect major
  distributions such as Ubuntu to provide a proper support for such a
  standard as Xen. I know it came as a disappointment for us that using
  Lucid as a (production) Xen dom0 was nearly impossible. Also, afair,
  KVM requires hardware support. Most recent machines provide it, but
  it's not rare to find servers that are too old to use it, and then
  you'd rather use Xen for servers than VMWare...
 
 
 I agree with that! Really big companies choose the things they know.
 And if they have to switch the distro they do it.
 

Noted. It sounds like Xen has a lot of inertia.

 Another advantage for Xen: it is more mature and easier to setup (at
 least for me because I have only one configuration file I can change
 with vim). Much more documentation around that works. You have much
 more network options. And you can easily assign a hardware NIC to a VM
 with Xen. With KVM this does not work on every hardware... (Now I have
 2 15.000,- ? servers where I can not do the things with KVM I could
 easily do with Xen. This was a pitty experience...)
 

I feel like a broken record, but could you provide us with some facts
to back up these claims? Bug reports, manual pages, etc.


I feel like there is a lot of anecdotal evidence, but we shouldn't make
our decisions just because somebody says KVM can't do this or Xen can
do that.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Michael Zoet

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Hash: SHA1

Am 02.04.2011 17:03, schrieb Clint Byrum:

...

 Another advantage for Xen: it is more mature and easier to setup (at
 least for me because I have only one configuration file I can change
 with vim). Much more documentation around that works. You have much
 more network options. And you can easily assign a hardware NIC to a VM
 with Xen. With KVM this does not work on every hardware... (Now I have
 2 15.000,- ? servers where I can not do the things with KVM I could
 easily do with Xen. This was a pitty experience...)


 I feel like a broken record, but could you provide us with some facts
 to back up these claims? Bug reports, manual pages, etc.

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libvirt/+bug/741706

I am into further investigations here. But the two servers are already
in production use, so it is hard to test and get deeper into it. For
now I help myself with all kinds of proxying. But for real virtualized
gateways / routers there is no good solution for me now with KVM.



 I feel like there is a lot of anecdotal evidence, but we shouldn't make
 our decisions just because somebody says KVM can't do this or Xen can
 do that.


That's right but Unix/Linux SysAdmins need options to choose from! If
Xen integration is easily done then Ubuntu Server should provide these
option. If not SysAdmins are forced to use other distros like SLES or
CentOS. That's the trueth in many datacenters.

By the way: KVM has lot of advatages, too. As always you have to
choose which one fits best ;-).

Michael




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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Serge van Ginderachter
On 2 April 2011 16:58, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:

   Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
   compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?



  Performance.



 Serge, would you mind elaborating on that? I'm looking for facts.


I tested several virtualisation technologies last year.

I told my conclusions earlier on another list, but I'll copy paste them here
for easier follow-up:

https://groups.google.com/d/msg/ganeti/JKejnQkAhgI/OdFBbww3K_cJ


About a small year ago, I have been conducting some various tests on
comparing different virtualisation technologies on different
platforms.

* tested VMWare ESXi, Xen on Debian and CentOS and KVM on Ubuntu and CentOS
* these tests have nothing to do with Ganeti, nor was there a test with
DRBD,
* on Xen and KVM I tested using HVM/Virtio - not so on VMWare
* made different tests, stressing CPU, disk, memory and network on 1
till 10 concurrent vm's.
* client vm machines were all Debian Lenny

Some general conclusions were:

* VMWare ESXi was the clear winner,
* Xen on Debian Lenny was a close second, and the winner amongst Open
Source solutions.
* Xen performance is way better than KVM, especially when looking at disk
access
* Xen performs in a more stable and predictable way, whilst KVM seemed
to perform more at random (which confirms Iustin's observations, )
* CentOS (5.4) performed remarkably well for being older sofwtare
versions (KVM, Xen, Linux kernel)
* performance on Ubuntu was really bad. The then recent Ubuntu Lucid
was far worse than CentOS 5.5 (both KVM)

* Disk speed on bare metal was 80MB/s
* on vm, those dropped to 40-20MB/s depending on the platform end
thenumber of concurrent access (= number of tested vm's)

Also, testing latency (lots of small writes): time dd if=/dev/zero
of=/dev/vda5 bs=512 count=10 oflag=direct

* 4.6 MB/s on bare metal
* 728 KB/s on vm Ubuntu + KVM
* on vm Debian Lenny + Xen:don't have the number anymore but noted a
performance drop of only 20%


It really struck me how Ubuntu's performance was really bad, even when
comparing the then recent Lucid to a Red Hat backported kernel (still
2.6.18)

Of course, lots of things have evolved since then, but when looking at the
major distro's, to update conclusions, one should look at Debian Squeeze and
Red Hat 6.
At least for Ubuntu, no things have changed if you only consider Ubuntu LTS
as a contender (which is how I look at it at least).




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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Chuck Short
On Sat, 02 Apr 2011 08:03:11 -0700
Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:

 Excerpts from Michael Zoet's message of Sat Apr 02 01:20:36 -0700
 2011:
  
  -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
  Hash: SHA1
  
  Am 02.04.2011 02:05, schrieb Raphaël Pinson:
   On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 1:51 AM, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com
   wrote:
   Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700
   2011:
  
   Just playing devil's advocate here.
  
   Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
   compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to,
   KVM?
  
  
   Familiarity is a good reason I think, but also industry
   standards, and hardware considerations. I think a lot of big
   companies expect major distributions such as Ubuntu to provide a
   proper support for such a standard as Xen. I know it came as a
   disappointment for us that using Lucid as a (production) Xen dom0
   was nearly impossible. Also, afair, KVM requires hardware
   support. Most recent machines provide it, but it's not rare to
   find servers that are too old to use it, and then you'd rather
   use Xen for servers than VMWare...
  
  
  I agree with that! Really big companies choose the things they know.
  And if they have to switch the distro they do it.
  
 
 Noted. It sounds like Xen has a lot of inertia.
 
  Another advantage for Xen: it is more mature and easier to setup (at
  least for me because I have only one configuration file I can change
  with vim). Much more documentation around that works. You have much
  more network options. And you can easily assign a hardware NIC to a
  VM with Xen. With KVM this does not work on every hardware... (Now
  I have 2 15.000,- ? servers where I can not do the things with KVM
  I could easily do with Xen. This was a pitty experience...)
  
 
 I feel like a broken record, but could you provide us with some facts
 to back up these claims? Bug reports, manual pages, etc.
 
 

 I feel like there is a lot of anecdotal evidence, but we shouldn't
 make our decisions just because somebody says KVM can't do this or
 Xen can do that.
 

http://iopscience.iop.org/1742-6596/.../1742-6596_219_4_042005.pdf

Again Im not saying we should drop KVM in favor of XEN. if it something
our users want then. We should at least have a better solution in
Ubuntu than what we have now.

chuck

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-02 Thread Serge van Ginderachter
On 2 April 2011 18:47, Chuck Short chuck.sh...@canonical.com wrote:

  I feel like there is a lot of anecdotal evidence, but we shouldn't
  make our decisions just because somebody says KVM can't do this or
  Xen can do that.


I fully agree with that.

Whilst I argument that Xen is definitely more performant than KVM, I'm
mostly using KVM instead of Xen.
So I never said KVM  was not good, definitley not.

Ubuntu needs to support both technologies, especially when Xen gets vanilla
dom0 support.

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-01 Thread Jorge Armando Medina
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 03/30/2011 08:35 AM, Etienne Goyer wrote:
 On 11-03-30 10:27 AM, Chuck Short wrote:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.
 
 I do not have much to contribute to the technical discussion around Xen
 dom0.  All I can say is that, in my work with corporate end-users, it's
 a FAQ; seems like Xen is entrenched in a lot of organisations.
 Maintaining and supporting a dom0 kernel would make the life of these
 organisations much easier, and even open new opportunities for Ubuntu in
 the enterprises.
 
 

I agree, there is a lot of organizations that prefere Xen over KVM, much
of them are stuck with xen 3.2 in hardy, or a manual setup compiling
from sources.

My vote for xen revist

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-01 Thread Raphaël Pinson
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Chuck Short chuck.sh...@canonical.com wrote:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.


This is great news. Where I work, we had considered using Lucid as a
dom0 but it was just a mess, and we did not want to consider KVM, so
we ended up using CentOS dom0 (and even then, we got stuck with 2.6.18
kernels until recently, which was a big issue for Lucid and up domUs).
I'll all for an officiel support for Ubuntu dom0, especially if it's
vanilla!


Raphaël

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-01 Thread Clint Byrum
Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:
 Hi,
 
 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

Just playing devil's advocate here.

Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-04-01 Thread Raphaël Pinson
On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 1:51 AM, Clint Byrum cl...@ubuntu.com wrote:
 Excerpts from Chuck Short's message of Wed Mar 30 07:27:50 -0700 2011:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

 Just playing devil's advocate here.

 Other than people already having familiarity with Xen, what is a
 compelling reason to support it in favor of, or in addition to, KVM?


Familiarity is a good reason I think, but also industry standards, and
hardware considerations. I think a lot of big companies expect major
distributions such as Ubuntu to provide a proper support for such a
standard as Xen. I know it came as a disappointment for us that using
Lucid as a (production) Xen dom0 was nearly impossible. Also, afair,
KVM requires hardware support. Most recent machines provide it, but
it's not rare to find servers that are too old to use it, and then
you'd rather use Xen for servers than VMWare...


Raphaël

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[Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-03-30 Thread Chuck Short
Hi,

In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

Regards
chuck

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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-03-30 Thread Etienne Goyer
On 11-03-30 10:27 AM, Chuck Short wrote:
 Hi,
 
 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

I do not have much to contribute to the technical discussion around Xen
dom0.  All I can say is that, in my work with corporate end-users, it's
a FAQ; seems like Xen is entrenched in a lot of organisations.
Maintaining and supporting a dom0 kernel would make the life of these
organisations much easier, and even open new opportunities for Ubuntu in
the enterprises.


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Re: [Oneiric-Topic] Revisit Xen support

2011-03-30 Thread Douglas Stanley
+1 for xen dom0 support!

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 10:27 AM, Chuck Short chuck.sh...@canonical.com wrote:
 Hi,

 In the past Xen support in Ubuntu as a host has been difficult for a
 variety of reasons most notably no upstream kernel support. Now that
 dom0 should be coming into the vanilla kernel soon. I think its time to
 revisit supporting Xen as a hypervisor as well.

 Regards
 chuck

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