On 02/06/2014 06:21 PM, Dan Yasny wrote:
I haven't tried it recently, but last time I did, the export domains
were compatible. Worst case, you can always do a manual disk move

there is no direct upgrade path, though it may work.
for now export/import should be ok. a maybe on the future detach/attach storage domain use case (not implemented yet).



On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 9:18 AM, Martijn Grendelman
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Martijn Grendelman schreef op 6-2-2014 17:02:
     > Hi,
     >
     > Dan Yasny schreef op 6-2-2014 16:38:
     >> This is the same question as in RHEL or Fedora IMO: do you want the
     >> bleeding edge features and lower code stability and reliability,
    or do
     >> you want to have techsupport (and that means a real SLA and an
     >> escalation path up to the engineering, if need be) behind you,
    stable
     >> and reliable, well tested code, but less of the advanced features.
     >
     > Thank you, this is what I thought.
     >
     > It's still a hard decision. If the stability and "testedness" of
    RHEL is
     > anything to go by, it's not reassuring at all (although it may be
    better
     > than Fedora, I don't know), although I must say that RedHat
    support is
     > helpful at times.
     >
     > Thanks again, I think I know enough :-)

    Or not ;-)

    Would it be possible (and doable) to migrate from oVirt to RHEV?

    If we start out with oVirt, but after some time we decide that RHEV
    would be a better fit after all, would it be possible to hook up
    existing oVirt/VDSM hosts to a RHEV engine, or am I thinking way too
    simple now?

    Cheers,
    Martijn.







     >>
     >>
     >> On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 8:06 AM, Martijn Grendelman
     >> <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>
    <mailto:[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>> wrote:
     >>
     >>     Hi,
     >>
     >>     This may be the wrong place to ask, but I'm looking for
    input to form an
     >>     opinion on an "oVirt or RHEV" question within my company.
     >>
     >>     I have been running oVirt for about 5 months now, and I'm quite
     >>     comfortable with its features and maintenance procedures. We
    are now
     >>     planning to build a private virtualization cluster for
    hosting clients'
     >>     applications as well as our own. Some people in the company are
     >>     questioning whether we should buy RHEV, but at this point, I
    can't see
     >>     the benefits.
     >>
     >>     Can anyone on this list shed a light on when RHEV might be a
    better
     >>     choice than oVirt? What are the benefits? The trade-offs?
     >>
     >>     I am looking for pragmatic, real-world things, not marketing
    mumbo
     >>     jumbo. That, I can get from redhat.com <http://redhat.com>
    <http://redhat.com> ;-)
     >>
     >>     Best regards,
     >>     Martijn.
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     >>
     >>
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