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xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] VMWARE Player alternative
 
Thanks for the info! I demo'd qemu and while it works o.k, I don't think 
better then VMplayer. It got someways to go - I'll keep my eye on it!
 
 It has some pretty nifty features, including compatibility with (single 
file) VMware virtual disks and (I think) Virtual PC virtual disks, as well 
as it's own copy on write format (so you can snapshot the disk state at 
various points).
 The main disadvantage is probably speed, but with the current (in beta) 
accelerator module there is a substantial speedup - did you try this?
 The other disadvantage is the GUI - it's not very friendly. There are some 
wrappers for starting QEmu from a GUI but basically it's waiting for 
somebody industrious to create a proper GTK or QT GUI with VMware Player 
type functionality.
 Though it would be nice for XEN team to come up with a solution like 
that of VMware Player
 
 It would indeed. Unfortunately Xen needs to be installed and booted into 
before you can run Xen domains. Once Xen becomes more pervasive (lots of 
distros are starting to ship it) it'll probably make sense to have a player 
/ workstation style GUI for people who are running Xen on a single system. 
This could be very nice - especially once Vanderpool / Pacifica hardware 
becomes commonplace.
 There are lots of little tricks you can do to make the tools nice. 
Scrapbook for UML allows you to click on a hyperlink to a running UML 
virtual machine and have that VM appear with a virtual display on your 
computer. This can be used (for instance) to demo software - click a link 
on the vendor's homepage and get a virtual machine with the product up and 
running. If you don't like it, just ditch that VM. If you do, then install 
the software properly. Pretty neat, and there are lots of possibilities 
too.
Cheers,
mark
 
M.A. Williamson wrote:
 
QEmu (http://www.qemu.org)
 Or if you're on a PPC or Intel Mac, take a look at Q: 
http://www.kberg.ch/q/
(Q is basically a release of QEmu that's had a nifty Mac GUI put on it)
 QEmu has an optional binary-only accelerator module that will boost 
the speed significantly but is closed-source (for now). There's an 
open source accelerator for Qemu called QVM86 but it's less advanced.
Cheers,
Mark
On Apr 20 2006, Joe Lee wrote:
 Thought I post this question here: Is there an open source 
alternative to VMware Player. I know it's a free product BUT would 
like to know if there is any known other open source alternatives. 
Thanks in advance for your comments!
Joe
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