I'll jump in in here where Ken left off.

The great benefit as i see it of using the Standalone HyperV model is that you 
dont have to introduce win2k8 servers into your network if you are not ready to 
for whatever reason. In fact you could go totally license free presuming that 
you were using open sauce software as guest VM's. There will be some benefit on 
the hardware resource side but bugger all if you choose to install the Hyperv 
as part of a server core installation. But the additional 512mb you may gain 
might be enough for 'a' guest.. hardly worth the trouble, that and they have 
said that the performance characteristics between them will be identical.

The drawback i see of the standalone hyperv is that you lose any clustering 
support and therefore what they call High Availability features obviously 
because you lose the benefits of the parent OS. It is also limited to 4 
physical processors and 32GB RAM.

Ken sort of did touch on these features but i guess you rubbed him the wrong 
way and he balked.

So if i understand your question you want to make sure that when you buy your 
single 2k8 std license that it is utilised for something individual or 
important like a stand alone file server for instance and not a HyperV host?? 
If that is the case and you cant/wont buy more licenses the yes i would agree, 
but the point Ken was trying to make im sure, is that only you will be able to 
make that judgement. Hopefully i have provided some detail for you from what i 
know so far. If you still need more you are going to have to dig yourself and 
perhaps wait until it is released and there is better supporting documentation.

HTH

Greg

________________________________
From: Ken Schaefer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, 16 September 2008 10:10 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Standalone Hyper-V vs. 2008 Hyper-V



From: Carl Houseman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, 16 September 2008 9:55 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Standalone Hyper-V vs. 2008 Hyper-V

But what is the advantage to spending the resources (RAM, disk) on even a 2008 
Server Core config to run the Hyper-V host, when my other choice is to save 
those resources for the actual VMs and use the standalone Hyper-V server 
instead?

What feature in Hyper-V host services under 2008 makes it advantageous to use 
that instead of standalone Hyper-V server, for the functional requirement I've 
outlined?

Answer the question or say "I don't know".

This wasn’t your original question. Please take your attitude somewhere else

For reference, your original question was:

Why would I NOT prefer to use standalone Hyper-V for all virtualized servers 
including 2008?

And the answer to that is “it depends”. You go figure it out for yourself.






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