Greetings To The DragonFlyBSD Forum,

Around one year ago I installed DragonFlyBSD from ISO image, on a QEMU / KVM 
virtual server at www.elastichosts.com (EH)
.
I plan to use DragonFly to host a website I am developing that has static 
content plus two fairly simple PHP + SQL apps.

My business strategy is to run DragonFly on QEMU / KVM virtualization, because 
this widely-used VM standard ensures lively price competition among plenty of 
VM hosting providers. I am happy to accept the higher overhead of QEMU / KVM, 
as compared to other more aggressive specialised VM architectures, in exchange 
for wider VM portability and a deeper VM supply market. 

* * *
* * *

I chose DragonFly as the server o / s, mainly for its reputation for 
reliability and efficiency, and for the robustness of the the HAMMER 
filesystem. The support of a solid team of open source developers for 
DragonFly, also attracted me.

After some minor fiddling around and one tweak of the QEMU / KVM configuration 
by EH tech support, DragonFly was booting fine. And readily accessible through 
both VNC console and SSH console.

A year ago, after that DragonFly installation work, I had to redeploy my time 
deal with other projects, so the DragonFly QEMU / KVM at EH has been idle until 
now.

* **
* * *

I am now porting the website PHP app from using MySQL to using PostgereSQL, 
expectong Postgres to be a more robust database server. That SQL migration work 
is done on a different development system, not the QEMU / KVM DragonFly VM..

When the PHP SQL porting task is finished, I will be returning to DragonFly on 
the EH QEMU / KVM (and to more active participation in the DragonFly forum:), 
to continue working with setting up DragonFly. Probable first step will be to 
upgrade DragonFly to the latest stable release.

Last year, when I paused the  DragonFly work, I had installed and was 
configuring the Fish Shell (fishshell.com) as the (non-emergency) regular 
working shell. But since then I have been following the fish shell users forum 
[email protected] and the seemingly (to me) casual attitude of 
fish shell developers, to breaking existing fish shell scripts, with new shell 
version releases, has convinced me to switch to try using the MKSH shell, 
instead with DragonFly.

* * *
* * *

I can't yet speak to the speed or dependability of DragonFly, under any kind of 
live production workload on the QEMU /KVM at EH, but I have high hopes of rapid 
throughput and great reliability.

Regards,

Steve

* * *

Steve Petrie, P.Eng.

ITS-ETO Consortium
Oakville, Ontario, Canada
[email protected]

----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Zachary Crownover 
  To: Justin Sherrill 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, December 11, 2015 3:42 PM
  Subject: Re: DragonFly on DigitalOcean


  Vultr works quite well, but you have to submit a support ticket to unblock 
SMTP traffic from your system, otherwise mail will just pool up on the system 
and you'll see weird things like 50+ concurrent instances of dma running.


  On Fri, Dec 11, 2015 at 12:39 PM, Justin Sherrill <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    If they (or any other provider) offers an "install from ISO" option,
    you can buy one of the other instances and see if you can upload/use
    the DragonFly ISO as an installation media, installed over whatever
    premade operating system is already present.  There's a number of
    people who have been trying that lately at various VPS providers -
    Netcup, Vultr, etc.


    On Fri, Dec 11, 2015 at 3:16 PM, Pierre Abbat
    <[email protected]> wrote:
    > Several days ago I set up a server on DigitalOcean. They offer several 
Linux
    > distros and FreeBSD, but no other BSD. How hard would it be for them to 
offer
    > DragonFly? They use Bochs for virtualization.
    >
    > Pierre
    > --
    > sei do'anai mi'a djuno puze'e noroi nalselganse srera
    >






  -- 

  Sincerely,

  Zachary Crownover

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