Kickass Women@lemmy.world to Linux · 11 months agoWhich distro in your opinion is the best for virtualization (Windows 10 on either KVM or VMware), stability, and speed?message-squaremessage-square40fedilinkarrow-up158arrow-down17
arrow-up151arrow-down1message-squareWhich distro in your opinion is the best for virtualization (Windows 10 on either KVM or VMware), stability, and speed?Kickass Women@lemmy.world to Linux · 11 months agomessage-square40fedilink
minus-squaredb2@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up7·11 months agohttps://www.proxmox.com/en/proxmox-virtual-environment/overview
minus-squareⲇⲅⲇlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·11 months agoFor just two VM, any Linux distro is enough, virt-manager to easily run those VMs up and done. The default network will allow them to communicate between their NAT. Proxmox sounds too many complications for just some testing or development stuff.
minus-squarekelvie@lemmy.calinkfedilinkarrow-up3·11 months agoProxmox is a lot more user friendly than virt-manager (yes I’ve used both, but I just started using proxmox).
minus-squareⲇⲅⲇlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·11 months agoBut Proxmox is a big web interface app with many packages, right? virt-manager looks much easier than installing Proxmox.
https://www.proxmox.com/en/proxmox-virtual-environment/overview
For just two VM, any Linux distro is enough,
virt-manager
to easily run those VMs up and done. The default network will allow them to communicate between their NAT. Proxmox sounds too many complications for just some testing or development stuff.Proxmox is a lot more user friendly than virt-manager (yes I’ve used both, but I just started using proxmox).
But Proxmox is a big web interface app with many packages, right?
virt-manager
looks much easier than installing Proxmox.