On Tue, 13 Apr 2021 at 08:24, Simon Matter simon.matter@invoca.ch wrote:
On 13.04.21 12:33, Simon Matter wrote:
Once upon a time, Nicolas Kovacs info@microlinux.fr said:
Both PVE and PBS are based on Debian, and now I wonder if RHEL-based systems have something similar to offer.
I believe Red Hat Virtualization, and its open upstream oVirt, are comparable to Proxmox. I have used oVirt for a number of years. oVirt itself doesn't include backup software (it supports VM snapshots and clones), but there are several third-party backup tools (both free and commercial) compatible with oVirt/RHV, like Storeware's vProtect (I haven't used it but seen others mention it).
I haven't followed oVirt/RHV but I'm wondering how free it is? Is it as "free" as RHEL or as CentOS/Alma/Rocky/Navy/Oracle Linux?
Upstream -> Product
Fedora -> RHEL oVirt -> RHV
Thanks for the confirmation.
In other words, we'll soon have four or more almost 100% identical rebuilds of RHEL but only 1 very lacking EPEL and 0 RHV clones ;-)
Those all depend on committed volunteers to do the work. That takes up a lot of time and effort from people who are in short supply because doing those things are more like a job than a 'weekend fun project'. This would normally be where people would pay for a product but there are not a lot of paying customers and a larger number of people who either expect it there or would rather go without than pay for it.
Regards, Simon
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