Hey thanks... I am more familiar with VMWare at this point, so that is what I was thinking... They are VIA embedded... given 1Ghz and 512mb do you think things would get sluggish assuming a moderately properly configured setup? Vyatta seems really slim and very efficient, and I have a hundred more things to say that I like!
My hosts are dual core amd 64s, with ram to spare so I honestly don't know if something less powerful would work in a virtualized setup. Guess there is one way to find out :) but was wondering if anyone had a comment about that. Todd Worden Web-Wired, LLC 434.906.0420 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.web-wired.com -----Original Message----- From: Dave Roberts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, January 07, 2008 4:40 PM To: 'Todd Worden'; vyatta-users@mailman.vyatta.com Subject: RE: [Vyatta-users] Refactoring Vyatta Config > Thanks for the tip... I have installed 'to' CF and that does > work very well. > I think you are right, the best approach might be to get a > USB CDROM and install from that. I'm just not thinking my > system spec would be beefy enough for a virtual machine, but > I'm no pro. If you're running a VIA processor on those, you'd have to run VMware to get the virtualization. Xen won't work on those yet because Vyatta doesn't (yet) support paravirtualization and VIA doesn't support the hardware virtualization hooks (AMD-V, etc.). -- Dave __________ NOD32 2772 (20080107) Information __________ This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system. http://www.eset.com _______________________________________________ Vyatta-users mailing list Vyatta-users@mailman.vyatta.com http://mailman.vyatta.com/mailman/listinfo/vyatta-users