Softaculous


Topic : How many vServers can Virtualizor handle


Posted By: SewBless on July 21, 2015, 10:40 pm
Hey ;)

does someone know how many vps with windows can be handled by virtualizor (without lag).

My dedi specs are:

Intel Xeon E5-1650V2

64 GB RAM

4 TB HDD

Is it possible to run 21 VMs (windows server 2012 r2) without lag? Because its not possible for me without using virtualizor (using open suse virt manager).

Posted By: asim_shaikh on July 22, 2015, 11:22 am | Post: 1
Quote
Hey ;)

does someone know how many vps with windows can be handled by virtualizor (without lag).

My dedi specs are:

Intel Xeon E5-1650V2

64 GB RAM

4 TB HDD

Is it possible to run 21 VMs (windows server 2012 r2) without lag?
Because its not possible for me without using virtualizor (using open
suse virt manager).



Hi,

Virtualizor is a web based control panel which passes commands to the main server.
The Number of VMs you create is totally independent of virtualizor and purely dependent on your Host Server.

With the Dedicated server specs you have specified you can run 21 VMs or more (assuming RAM to be 2GB for each VPS).


-----------------------
Regards,
Virtualizor Team
http://www.virtualizor.com

Posted By: ZXHost on July 22, 2015, 11:22 am | Post: 2
Virtualizor is just a control panel ontop of which ever Virtualization technology you decided to use.

However you won't be able to run 21 (Server 2012R2) on a single Disk without issues, due to I/O limit of a single disk.

Your need at least two SSD's in Raid 1 to be able to run anywhere near this many windows VM's.

Posted By: SewBless on July 22, 2015, 2:42 pm | Post: 3
Ok, thanks for the answers. Thats what i wanted to know. So i would need a SSD if i want to run around 20 VMs right? I just wondered that a friend of me told me his server (lower specs than mine) can handle 21 VMs with no issues.

Second question: what virtulization is better for me? (running windows server 2012 vms) Xen or KVM?
I tried KVM without virtualizor and i only can handle like 10 vms (cpu is at 100% than).

Any ideas? :)

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