I downloaded the vz9.iso and mounted it, and all the files are dated Feb 2 2022.
So, no joy, despite the deceptive Dec 2022 date on the iso. Jake On Tue, Jan 31, 2023 at 7:38 AM jehan Procaccia < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > actually I wonder if openvz-iso-9: > > *https://download.openvz.org/virtuozzo/releases/9.0/x86_64/iso/ > <https://download.openvz.org/virtuozzo/releases/9.0/x86_64/iso/>* > > *openvz-iso-9.0.0.iso 24-Feb-2022 04:41 2.9G* > > which is supposed to be the base reference for virtuozzo 9 , > > is the same as > > http://repo.virtuozzo.com/vz/releases/ > > *vz9.iso 20-Dec-2022 12:31 2G* > > please let us know which .iso we should start with to test vz9 (open > version) > > why haven't they the same date (Feb 2022 vs Dec 2022) > > Thanks . > On 28/01/2023 11:21, jehan Procaccia wrote: > > I hope I am not wrong to disagree regarding your skepticism for future of > openVZ (7,8,9 ...) > > check in that same thread discussion : > > https://marc.info/?l=openvz-users&m=167080032829556&w=2 > > I confirm that running openVZ 7 is rock solid, and we do use lots of CTs, > for me the best featured containers solution > > we are expecting a continuation with VZ 9 (as 8 might be skipped). as a > public accademic school we appreciate free and openSource software > > but we keep purchase few virtuozzo commercial licences as much as we can > to contribute to the project . > > as long as this: > https://docs.virtuozzo.com/virtuozzo_hybrid_server_7_users_guide/learning-basics/vhs-vs-openvz.html > > *OpenVZ <https://openvz.org/> is a free, open-source virtualization > solution available under GNU GPL. OpenVZ is the base for Virtuozzo Hybrid > Server, the commercial solution that builds on OpenVZ and offers additional > benefits to customers.* > > is still true, if Virtuozzo Hybrid Server is based on the openSource > OpenVZ, I don't see any fears regarding its future . > > https://docs.virtuozzo.com/virtuozzo_product_lifecycle_policy/index.html > > but indeed, we are waiting for a VZ 9 which maybe lacks of a clearer > raodmap, for exemple, is it still as much an Ahpha release (not to use in > production) as mentioned here (Feb 2022) > > > https://www.virtuozzo.com/company/blog/product-updates/virtuozzo-hybrid-server-9-alpha-2/ > > or http://repo.virtuozzo.com/vz/releases/ > > *vz9.iso 20-Dec-2022 12:31 2G* > http://repo.virtuozzo.com/vz/releases/ > > *vz9.iso 20-Dec-2022 12:31 2G* > > which seems quite recent, is in a far better state now . > > Thanks . > > jehan . > > > On 27/01/2023 21:16, Gena Makhomed wrote: > > OpenVZ 6 is last fully functional version, running on top of CentOS. > > OpenVZ 7, 8, 9 ... > > May be better to use just virtual machines using QEMU-KVM and libvirt ? > > This solution is very stable, very feature rich and very useful. > > If you need to use very cheap virtual machines - try to use > https://firecracker-microvm.github.io/ > > Or you can combine Firecracker MicroVMs with Docker / OCI images to unify > containers and VMs: https://github.com/weaveworks/ignite > > Stop to use OpenVZ, because OpenVZ 6 is End Of Life and now it is dead > project. > > OpenVZ 6 is just last true and fully functional OpenVZ version. > > Something named OpenVZ 7, OpenVZ 8, OpenVZ 9 ... is just agony of OpenVZ > project. > > On 09.12.2022 2:16, jjs - mainphrame wrote: > > I've been running openvz 7 for some years, and I periodically check on the > status of openvz 8 and 9. > > While openvz 7 has been getting updates, it seems openvz 8 is fairly > static, and openvz 9 seems not ready for use. > > Is there an intent to continue support of openvz beyond version 7? > > Since openvz is a great advertisement for virtuozzo, it would be a shame > if > it faded away. > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openvz.org/mailman/listinfo/users >
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