The system that I have now is CentOS with Libvirt/QEMU. I have looked into Proxmox, but I got the impression that you have to have a subscription to receive updates. That drove me away from looking further into using Proxmox.
My wife and I both got laptops now, and I am going to repurpose the desktop that we have into a very low-powered VM server. As far as I know, I only plan on running no more than two or three VMs at a time; and I would like to be able to create, run, manage, and connect to the VMs completely from other devices (i.e. my phone or laptop).
The system that I have now is CentOS with Libvirt/QEMU. I have looked into Proxmox, but I got the impression that you have to have a subscription to receive updates. That drove me away from looking further into using Proxmox.
I do know that using Virtualbox has a hypervisor would be the easiest path to take with phpVirtualBox; however, phpVirtualBox is not very mobile friendly since a lot of functionallity can only be accessed by right- clicking on the VM itself, and as far as I can tell, there are no other way to access said functionallity.
So, there is my reasoning with using libvirt/QEMU in CentOS. Would anyone have any recommendation for a Web interface for libvirt? I am seriously giving Kimchi a serious consideration, but it has to be built and a lot of the dependencies to build and run it is required. However, I am open to other possibilities.
Re: LibVirt Web UI
By: Jagossel to All on Wed Nov 28 2018 08:22 pm
The system that I have now is CentOS with Libvirt/QEMU. I have looked into Proxmox, but I got the impression that you have to have a subscription to receive updates. That drove me away from looking further into using Proxmox.
proxmox is awesome.
i highly recommend it. the proxmox ve subscription is something additional for businesses to deploy it
So, there is my reasoning with using libvirt/QEMU in CentOS. Would anyone have any recommendation for a Web interface for libvirt? I am seriously giving Kimchi a serious consideration, but it has to be built and a lot of the dependencies to build and run it is required. However, I am open to other possibilities.
Have you thought about LXC? Linux Containers?
The system that I have now is CentOS with Libvirt/QEMU. I have looked into Proxmox, but I got the impression that you have to have a subscription to receive updates. That drove me away from looking further into using Proxmox.
My wife and I both got laptops now, and I am going to repurpose the desktop that we have into a very low-powered VM server. As far as I know, I only plan on running no more than two or three VMs at a time; and I would like
to be able to create, run, manage, and connect to the VMs completely from other devices (i.e. my phone or laptop).
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