Proxmox delivers its software-defined datacenter contender and VMware escape hatch

Open source virtualization project Proxmox has delivered the first full and stable release of its Datacenter Manager product, making it a more viable alternative as a private cloud platform.

Proxmox's Virtual Environment, a platform that hosts virtual machines and containers, and includes software-defined storage and networking, has become increasingly prominent in recent years as Broadcom's VMware business unit focused on large enterprise customers. Proxmox has become a popular alternative to VMware for organizations whose needs don't go far beyond basic server virtualization. Even one VMware partner The Register recently spoke to decided Proxmox was sufficient for some internal workloads it felt did not need all the features of VMware's Cloud Foundation platform.

Proxmox, however, has bigger ambitions and on Thursday started chasing them by releasing a new product called Datacenter Manager that offers centralized management for multiple, independent Proxmox-based environments.

As explained in Proxmox's launch announcement, the product "... provides an aggregated view of all your connected nodes and clusters and is designed to manage complex and distributed infrastructures, from local installations to globally scaled data centers."

Datacenter Manager also enables migration of VMs across clusters without having to manually reconfigure networks. That's a trick VMware invented decades ago and has since become table stakes for serious private cloud players.

Other features also help to make Proxmox a contender, such as VM fleet management tools that allow admins to identify VMs that need patches and arrange installation, lifecycle management for VMs, and a dashboard that allows a view of all hosts and the workloads they host - and their status.

Proxmox Server Solutions GmbH, the entity that develops Proxmox products and makes them available under the GNU AGPLv3 license, wrote Datacenter Manager in Rust. That's no guarantee of strong security, but it's a decent start. Proxmox's developers based the platform on Debian Trixie 13.2, using version 6.17 of the Linux kernel, and with ZFS 2.3.4 included.

Datacenter Manager downloads are available here. If you take it for a spin, let us know how it goes! ®

Search
About Us
Website HardCracked provides softwares, patches, cracks and keygens. If you have software or keygens to share, feel free to submit it to us here. Also you may contact us if you have software that needs to be removed from our website. Thanks for use our service!
IT News
Jan 17
Jan 16
Ready for a newbie-friendly Linux? Mint team officially releases v 22.3, 'Zena'

Newer kernel, newer Cinnamon, new tools, and even new icons

Jan 16
Hyperscalers, vendors funding trillion dollar AI spree, but users will have to pay up long term

Analyst: We'll hit a spot where 'we go from that was a great idea to where's my revenue?'

Jan 16
RondoDox botnet linked to large-scale exploit of critical HPE OneView bug

Check Point observes 40K+ attack attempts in our hours, with government organizations under fire

Jan 16
Just because Linus Torvalds vibe codes doesn't mean it's a good idea

Opinion For trivial projects, it's fine. For serious work, forget about it