This is a question that's come up a few times.
Mike's recommendation is that you "generally need 1 core and 2 GB for
every 25 concurrent users at peak" (ref this thread:
http://apache-guacamole-general-user-mailing-list.2363388.n4.nabble.com/Guacamole-System-Resource-requirements-for-better-performance-td5996.html).
In the half-dozen installations I have this fits in with my experience
too. As far as I'm aware no-one has expressed any contrary view.
With regard to disk sizing, I generally run my installations as a VM
with dynamic sizing up to ~20GB. Most use less than 3GB in practice.
Network bandwidth is more difficult to determine, it will depend upon a
number of factors around what it is your users are doing, and how you
have things set up. There have been various discussions on this too; I
suggest having a look at the mailing list referenced above as you may
find someone with a use-case similar to yours. This thread may be
helpful as a start:
http://apache-guacamole-general-user-mailing-list.2363388.n4.nabble.com/Viewing-active-connections-while-using-user-mapping-xml-td7844.html#a7861
In general it's fair to say that Guacamole does a good job with
compression, and bandwidth requirements are not too onerous.
On 17/06/2020 4:02 a.m., lynnaj wrote:
Hello All -
I can't seem to find anything recent online about Guacamole server
specifications/recommendations.
What size/type of server(s) are you running this on and for how many
concurrent connections? How much memory? How many and what types of CPU(s)?
How much disk space? How much network bandwidth?
What am I missing?
Thank you.
- Lynna Jackson, Williams College
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