On Tue, Jan 19, 2016 at 01:46:45AM +0100, lee wrote: > "J. Roeleveld" <[email protected]> writes: > > > On Monday, January 18, 2016 02:02:27 AM lee wrote: > >> "J. Roeleveld" <[email protected]> writes: > >> > On 17 January 2016 18:35:20 CET, Mick <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > > >> > [...] > >> > > >> >>I use the icaclient provided by Citrix to access my virtual desktop at > >> >>work, > >> >>but have never tried to set up something similar at home. What > >> >>opensource > >> >>software would I need for this? Is there a wiki somewhere to follow? > >> >> > >> > I'd love to do this myself as well. > >> > > >> > Citrix sells the full package as 'XenDesktop'. To do it yourself you need > >> > a VMserver (Xen or similar) and a remote desktop tool that hooks into the > >> > VM display. (Spice or VNC) > >> > > >> > Then you need some way of authenticating users and providing access to > >> > the > >> > client software. [...] > >> > >> You would have a full VM for each user? > > > > Yes > > > >> That would be a huge waste of resources, > > > > Diskspace and CPU can easily be overcommitted. > > Overcommitting disk space sounds like a very bad idea. Overcommitting > memory is not possible with xen. >
Depends on how the load is. Right now I have a 500GB HDD at work. I use VirtualBox and vagrant for testing various software. Every VM in VirtualBox gets a 50GB hard disk, and I generally have 7 or 8 at a time. Add in all the other stuff on my system, which includes a 200GB dataset, and the disk is overcommitted. Of course, none of the VirtualBox disks use anywhere near 50GB. All Joost is saying is that most resources can be overcommitted, since all the users will not be using all their resources at the same time. Alec

