VergeOS Might Be The VMware Alternative You’ve Been Looking For!
VergeIO and its UCI stack, #VergeOS, might not be familiar names to those in the world of enterprise virtualization, but their compelling virtualization stack has some pretty compelling reasons why you should consider it a replacement for #VMware.
In this video, I take VergeOS for a spin on my 4-node test host, talk about its architecture, installation, user interface, and user experience, and give you my final thoughts.
You can find VergeIO at:
**GET SOCIAL AND MORE WITH US HERE!**
Get help with your Homelab, ask questions, and chat with us!
🎮
**Check out HomeLab Gear for all your homelab needs!**
💿
Subscribe and follow us on all the socials, would ya?
📸
💻
Find all things 2GT on our website!
🌍
More of a podcast kinda person? Check out our Podcast here:
🎙️
Support us through the YouTube Membership program! Becoming a member gets you priority comments, special emojis, and helps us make videos!
😁
**Chapters**
0:00 Intro
1:02 Who is VergeIO?
1:50 VergeOS Architecture
3:36 VergeOS Minimum Reqs
4:24 VergeOS install and console
6:00 Overview of the VergeOS GUI
12:02 Recipes and deploying VMs
13:11 Final thoughts on VergeOS
16:14 Closing!
[ad_2]
source
you guys are scary, was just starting to look at this last night
No homelab offer is a no go for me
None of the new virtualization stacks are going to make a dent without enterprise backup support. We really need Veeam, Rubrik, and Cohesity to get on the vanilla KVM train.
Is this video sponsored?
What's the underlying virtualization technology? QEMU? Proprietary? another?
That's nice! I'd like to test it in my homelab, but the requirements is right for me at the moment.
My primary concern is that VergeOS requires two or more servers, which could be challenging for small businesses or home labs. Plus, you can't simply have a boot drive (for the OS only) and use NFS or iSCSI for your external VM storage.