As Reindl wrote for virtualzation is better to use some bare-metal system.
Beside VMWare there are other virtualization solutions: KVM with
VirtualManager or Ovirt, Xen/Citrix, Openstack, VirtualBox, Choosing the
right solution depends on your needs. My opinion and experience says that
the use only one server in a production environment can be very risky
business. A few moths ago I was put in production environment one Ovirt 3.1
instalation over F17. (2 nodes for Virtualzation with 10+ virtual machines,
mixed Linux and Windows, with live migration )
For now, I am very pleased with Ovirt as a virtualization solution. Ovirt
can be installed on Centos 6.x also, with some hardware HCL problems,
depending on hardware you are using.
Also i was build up HA ISCSI storage over Centos/F17 over 1Gbps dedicated
network. So far I am satisfied with the performance of the system. ( I hope
that management will soon provide some money for 10Gbps network.:) )

On 5 January 2013 03:59, Subhas Sing <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks Reindl for quick reply. Actually we have of lot of instance already
> running with it in Microsoft Server as host OS. We are planing to move 64
> bit feroda server.
>
> Thanks,
> Subhas
>
> Date: Sat, 5 Jan 2013 03:19:19 +0100
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: How to disable NMI watchdog?
>
>
> Am 05.01.2013 03:17, schrieb Reindl Harald:
> >
> >
> > Am 05.01.2013 01:24, schrieb Subhas Sing:
> >> Hello, I am trying to install vmware server in Fedora 16. I tried to 
> >> disable NMI watchdog kernel parameter. Can
> >> anybody please let me know how do it ? I followed following procedure but 
> >> without success!!
> >>
> >>   $ cat /proc/sys/kernel/nmi_watchdog
> >> If you get a '1', then the feature is enabled  and must be turned off or 
> >> VMs will mysteriously crash. To turn off
> >> nmi_watchdog is different for Fedora 15 and Fedora 16:
> >>
> >>   * [5] Fedora 15: Edit /boot/grub/grub.conf and add “nmi_watchdog=0” to 
> >> the kernel line.
> >>   * [5] Fedora 16: Edit /etc/default/grub and add “nmi_watchdog=0” to the 
> >> GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX. Then run:
> >>
> >>
> >>     # grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg”
> >>     to rebuild the grub configuration.
> >>
> >> Now, reboot the system and check the /proc/sys/kernel/nmi_watchdog 
> >> parameter again to make sure you see a '0'.
> >>
> >> http://communities.vmware.com/message/1891427
> >
> > you have quoted the answer to your question
> > what is your problem?
>
> however DO NOT INSTALL VMware Server
> VMware Server is EOL and not updated since THREE YEARS
>
> you can stick with VMware Player if it must be free
> or buy VMware Workstation which is not really expensive
>
>
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