> 1) Hosting: > > ... > Unifying can be interesting here, if you run the same distribution in > every vserver. It depends on how much work you will spend on doing this.
It's also a question of what the customer wants to make, how much he's working with packages and how much he knows about the system (if he switches from stable debian to testing debian, unifying could cause a lot of trouble) > 2) Flexibility > > Next group is running different hosts in different vservers. For the > easiness of moving hosts. > Means, if you have a too high load on a host, you can tar a couple of > vservers down, untar them > on a new host and you are running. Problem solved, no big problem. > > Unifying could be a space saver, but how expensive are harddisks ? They're cheap. It's also a question of how small a distribution is.. a system that takes 200-300mb of disk-space is small and a 160gb Harddisk costs about 180$ here (Switzerland). How many vservers are you running on what kind of machines? Anyone tried really high numbers of vservers yet (>100) on the same machine? Greets Joel -- +++ GMX - Mail, Messaging & more http://www.gmx.net +++ Bitte l�cheln! Fotogalerie online mit GMX ohne eigene Homepage!
