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replacement module for HyperVM


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Below is a reply i received from Matt in regards to a module to replace HyperVM

 

"Hi,

 

As soon as there's a clear favorite for what people are moving to from HyperVM then we'll certainly be looking at writing a module for it.

 

Regards,

 

Matt "

 

As Matt wants us to come up with a favourite to replace the HyperVM modules then please list here your favourite control panel to replace HyperVM.

 

Please no long winded stories, just simple choices here.

Edited by easyhosting
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first option (support everything - openvz, xen, virtualbox, etc):

Have API support too

www.libvirt.org

 

second option:

Don't know if have API support

www.vtonf.com

 

3rd option:

Have API support, but isn't free.

virtuozzo

I'll say vtonf is definitely out of the list. It is buggy, developer MIA (I read so), last update is a year ago I think.

 

Virtuozzo is definitely very welcomed, as I'm sure many WHMCS clients are eager to have that being supported. There is something being developed called SolusVM, and their ETA is mid-July. Not sure if it is a good one, but looks promising.

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read the initial post it asking for members favourites so WHMCS can decide which to modulate not a list of control panels like what you have provided, so if you cannot read posts correctly then dont reply to them.

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I'll say vtonf is definitely out of the list. It is buggy, developer MIA (I read so), last update is a year ago I think.

 

Virtuozzo is definitely very welcomed, as I'm sure many WHMCS clients are eager to have that being supported. There is something being developed called SolusVM, and their ETA is mid-July. Not sure if it is a good one, but looks promising.

 

Read the initial post "Please no long winded stories, just simple choices here. "

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My huge favorite would be proxmox. I'm using it as long as hypervm but although lesser options I find it very very stable. Furthermore it seems to perform better compared to Hypervm. If a Proxmox module would become available I buy everyone a beer here ;)

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Vituzzon doesn't support full virtualiztion (like XEN / KVM / VMWare does) so it shouldn't be a replacement for HyperVM.

 

My choices would be

Citrix Xenserver

promoxo

enomaly

openQRM

 

I look these solutions, and all that don't offer support to OpenVZ and XEN at the same time.

 

HyperVM support both virtualization types, for this reason I suggest libvirt.org.

 

Some reasons to use it:

 

1- it's just an API;

2- a module can be created directed in whmcs, without any control panel;

3- users will manage vmachines inside whmcs;

4- run every kind of type virtualization model;

5- it's free and opensource;

 

features:

 

* The Xen hypervisor on Linux and Solaris hosts.

* The QEMU emulator

* The KVM Linux hypervisor

* The LXC Linux container system

* The OpenVZ Linux container system

* The User Mode Linux paravirtualized kernel

* The VirtualBox hypervisor

* Storage on IDE/SCSI/USB disks, FibreChannel, LVM, iSCSI, NFS and filesystems

* Remote management using TLS encryption and x509 certificates

* Remote management authenticating with Kerberos and SASL

* Local access control using PolicyKit

* Zero-conf discovery using Avahi multicast-DNS

* Management of virtual machines, virtual networks and storage

* Portable client API for Linux, Solaris and Windows

* A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes).

* Free software available under the GNU Lesser General Public License.

* A long term stable C API

* A set of bindings for common languages

* A CIM provider for the DMTF virtualization schema

* A QMF agent for the AMQP/QPid messaging system

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I look these solutions, and all that don't offer support to OpenVZ and XEN at the same time.

 

HyperVM support both virtualization types, for this reason I suggest libvirt.org.

 

Some reasons to use it:

 

1- it's just an API;

2- a module can be created directed in whmcs, without any control panel;

3- users will manage vmachines inside whmcs;

4- run every kind of type virtualization model;

5- it's free and opensource;

 

features:

 

* The Xen hypervisor on Linux and Solaris hosts.

* The QEMU emulator

* The KVM Linux hypervisor

* The LXC Linux container system

* The OpenVZ Linux container system

* The User Mode Linux paravirtualized kernel

* The VirtualBox hypervisor

* Storage on IDE/SCSI/USB disks, FibreChannel, LVM, iSCSI, NFS and filesystems

* Remote management using TLS encryption and x509 certificates

* Remote management authenticating with Kerberos and SASL

* Local access control using PolicyKit

* Zero-conf discovery using Avahi multicast-DNS

* Management of virtual machines, virtual networks and storage

* Portable client API for Linux, Solaris and Windows

* A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes).

* Free software available under the GNU Lesser General Public License.

* A long term stable C API

* A set of bindings for common languages

* A CIM provider for the DMTF virtualization schema

* A QMF agent for the AMQP/QPid messaging system

 

 

From what I've read so far, libvirt also looks like a very good option.

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