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Re: VM software for personal use?



On 04/23/2010 06:31 PM, Richard Lawrence wrote:
Hi all,

I am looking to run some virtual machines for personal use: I'd like
to (attempt to) try out some alternative OSes from within my Lenny
host.  My goals are to be able to get a taste of some more "exotic"
systems (maybe: BSD, Plan 9, Open Genera) without threatening my
stable environment, and with easy cleanup.  My understanding is that
the easiest way to do this is to run these systems as virtual
machines, though if others have different suggestions, please let me
know.

I would also just like to learn more about running a VM, since I'd
like to be able to help my dad out. He has a Windows development
machine that is choking to death on anti-virus software.  It would be
nice to be able to help him convert that into a VM inside GNU/Linux,
so the machine will become usable again for things other that don't
require Windows.

I am wondering if others have recommendations for where to start with
this project.  I am pretty much a complete newb with respect to
virtual machine technology; I don't really know how to assess whether
Xen, VirtualBox, QEMU, KVM, or something else would be the best
software for me to start learning.

I value:
- free over non-free
- ease of use and good documentation over performance
- installation via apt and reasonable default configuration
- simple networking on commodity hardware
- other basic integration with host OS services (perhaps file sharing,
USB, printing)

I realize that these things may not all come in the same package. But
if they do, or if someone could give me some guidance about how to
sort out the tradeoffs, I'd be most appreciative!

Thanks,

Richard

P.S.  Apologies if this question seems too far off-topic for
debian-user.  If there's a better place to ask this question, I'd like
to know that, too.


Hi,
I have Sun VirtualBox. It's easy to use and install.
The guests OS that I tried and work: Debian, MEPIS, OpenSolaris, OpenSuse, Solaris 10, XP and some other Linux distros. DesktopBSD and FreeBSD work but can't get GUI -that can be lack of my knowledge.

Same with open VirtualBox except I think that there is no USB support.

Aqemu (qemu) easy to use and install -DesktopBSD work's with GUI.

I think that all VM have file sharing, printing depends on USB if you have USB printer.

--
Bye,
Goran Dobosevic
Hrvatski: www.dobosevic.com
 English: www.dobosevic.com/en/
Registered Linux User #503414


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