Thank you Eric for your detailed answer. It is very helpful.

Is there someone else in our community, who is using CloudStack and VMware 
together?

Kind regards,


 

On 26 Oct 2021, at 21:36, Eric Green 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Not currently using the VMware integration, but it's on our road map.

The main reason for using Cloudstack for us was that it worked well with Linux 
KVM hosts without needing to purchase expensive add-ons or licenses. This 
allowed us to spin up our cluster rapidly using existing machines in our racks 
without having to get budget approvals and such. However, now that we have 
budget for an expansion of our internal cloud, managing the existing VMware 
hosts and their virtual machines using Cloudstack is a natural way to extend 
our on-premise cloud infrastructure to manage more of our infrastructure.

In short, the ability to manage deploying to both KVM and ESXi hosts is one 
reason to use Cloudstack rather than vCloud Director. They'll be separate 
zones, but with a common way of deploying virtual machines and managing virtual 
machines. That said, if we were a vSphere-only site, vCloud Director would be 
something I'd look at. Pricing might be an issue however -- Cloudstack is of 
course "free" (lol, not when you consider the time implementing it), while I 
have no idea what vCloud Director's pricing is. Our business is price 
sensitive, yours may be less so.

On 10/26/2021 3:35 AM, Ivet Petrova wrote:
Hi all,

I am working on an idea and wanted to get some community feedback. I know that 
CloudStack has a VMware integration and you can orchestrate your VMware 
environment with it.
But on the other hand, the natural choice for all VMware users is vCloud 
Director.

Can somebody who is using such setup share why you have chosen CloudStack vs. 
vCloud Director? What is the difference and what is the CloudStack advantage?

Kind regards,





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