Best Opensource Cloud platform I want to know which is the best Open Source Cloud Platform among the following ++++++++++++++ list of top cheapest host http://Listfreetop.pw Top 200 best traffic exchange sites http://Listfreetop.pw/surf free link exchange sites list http://Listfreetop.pw/links list of top ptc sites list of top ptp sites Listfreetop.pw Listfreetop.pw +++++++++++++++ Openstack OpenNebula CloudStack Nitesh Shah My Personal Blog - http://www.niteshn.info My Technical Blog - http://www.techknowlogy.in A lot of providers are using OpenStack but not sure how you categorize "the best" as it depends on your setup. openstack is the most popular I believe, but they had a head start. Cloudstack i think has stalled a bit. But for what is the best, a lot has to do with what hardware you put in place. These solutions all take some time to set up, and then it becomes what you are comfortable with. Rebel Networks Geek Powered Hosting - The Cloud Made Simple SuperHero 24 |7 | 365 Support Define best? Really depends what you want to use it for, what level of technical knowledge you have etc. etc. etc. Karl Austin :: KDA Web Services Ltd. UK Business Hosting, Managed Servers & Private Cloud :: 0800 5429 764 Call us today and ask about our hosting & colocation solutions. I would suggest you will try each of those platform, and find what solution should fit your needs. Personally, I tried only Openstack and in my opinion I can say that it gives me a lot of options, and it's feature rich. Try openstack first. Openstack is highly flexible, but it can be overwhelming CloudStack is much more monolithic, but supports fewer circumstances After you spend some time with those two, you may find a paid solution such as OnApp is a better value than it seems at first. ManagedWay WE BUILD CLOUDS Cloud Computing | Fiber Optic Internet | Colocation Openstack the best way for you .. is there any review about opennebula? www.rajamitra.co.id- Indonesian Hosting Trusted Provider Domain Registration - Web Shared Hosting - Virtual Private Server g eazy make money a host of synonym www.8hits.com sunshinesurfclub.com thehappypigcountry.com coin4btc.com bitcoinfaucet.tk ebesucher.com domain join q es un hosting en internet I would suggest to research and test out each of the platforms. I have tried CloudStack and OpenStack. OpenStack is good, flexible and requires intense level of Linux and planning. However since it is used widely, can provide better compatibility with other providers (like onboarding and offboarding clients) I didn't like the fact that the terms used (Nova, Swift, etc) are bit of learning curve. Cloudstack is good, not as flexible as OpenStack but it is easy to understand for beginners. Terms are similar to traditional administrators. No vanilla OpenStack Cloud or true Cloud with a capital C is not trivial to implement. You need a strong team that has deep knowledge of operating systems, cloud architecture, and some coding skills. Cloud is however a worth-while endeavor, as there will be over $200-Billion spent on cloud over the next few years. See what Gartner and other market research companies have to say about cloud. OpenStack is a framework or tool-kit to build cloud infrastructure that works best for you. OpenStack was created so that Rackspace could be agnostic to the vendors their customers chose for hypervisor, storage, or networking. This is why there is no vanilla OpenStack. Fast-forward from circa 2013 to the modern day, it looks like where expensive proprietary solutions aren't involved (often because of sunken cost driven by politics..) Calico is the winner for OpenStack networking and Ceph is the winner for OpenStack storage. Ceph is a great storage system if it's put together properly (which means you need people who know how to do that). For a long time Ceph lacked end-to-end software-driven data integrity, but with its new Bluestore engine Ceph has software-driven data integrity. In my own opinion the best cloud platform is Joyent's Triton which is Open Source with exception to the customer-facing Web-UI, but building a customer-facing Web-UI is easy if you're serious about building an enterprise-class cloud. Triton provides truly bare-metal containers in the form of illumos Zones, which are like an industrial-class version of FreeBSD Jails. With Triton the entire datacenter is the "Docker Host", the Docker command-line can be used against Triton directly, so Triton arguably provides the very best Docker integration and experience. Triton stands out because it uses ZFS for storage and has its own very clean VX-LAN implementation for tenants/customers. With Triton you can have millions of private tenant networks on one multi-tenant overlay network all riding on a single layer-3 network. Where Triton has a disadvantage is KVM instances have direct-attached storage, which is great for performance but not great when a compute node fails and human hands are needed to unplug the compute node's disk pool to a fresh compute node to bring the containers/VMs back online. Stateful backends for SQL, NoSQL, or Object are always clustered any way, so the failure of a compute node with direct-attached storage is categorically not a problem for container deployments. In my opinion, an ideal cloud would use a combination of Triton for container-native infrastructure with direct-attached storage, then OpenStack along-side it providing KVMs that use Ceph as a storage back-end. https://www.joyent.com/blog/smartdat...ng-opinionated We have been using OpenNebula, but few years ago we have switched to VMware. OpenNebula is still on place for some internal operations. It worked good for us for few years. Host Color ★ Cloud, Dedicated Hosting & Colocation & Europe Infrastructure Hosting Data centers ★★ in the U.S. & Europe Network ★ AS46873 ★★ Level 3, Cogent, Hurricane Electric, Vocus & more 24/7 Support ★★ 1-574-367-2393; Skype: HostColor It really depends on the features and your requirements however OpenStack might be the one you need as it gives more features as compared to rest. Openstack setup can become complex. Needs experience to setup. Cloudstack is easier to setup. But lately not much happening. If you want basic features, then a good choice. Joyent cloud is also a good choice. I like illumos OS. For in house deployments, it is worth having a look. I have heard about opennebula to be user friendly with good features. If you are looking to start, this might be better than openstack and cloudstack. BountySite: Every Website deserves Security Website Time Machine with Offsite Security Scanning The Bounty Program for Hosting Industry FileTrail - Full Server Backup | SSHTrail - SSH Jumpbox This is a tricky question to answer - especially with "best" not being defined. With that said, OpenStack is the favored option but there's a saying about OpenStack regarding the fact you need a dedicated team to constantly monitor, maintain the health of, and deploy that it is essentially a "neverending job." We used Mirantis OpenStack for a little while in concurrency with our pre-existing VMWare infrastructure and even for a large team: the added burden of OpenStack just wasn't worth it when VMWare continues to be seamless. A hyperconverged solution is Nutanix but if you thought the VMWare Enterprise Plus ecosystem was expensive, Nutanix will blow it right out of the proverbial water. It, however, does a good job and in all honesty, has a better management interface over VMWare. Of course, with the exception to OpenStack, everything I mentioned is not open source. The question you should ask yourself: if the time investment of OpenStack is worth it when comparatively there are a multitude of other solutions that can get-to-market faster and do not require anywhere near as much babysitting. Proxmox has not been mentioned here once is it really that bad? We are used some time OnApp, but after that moved to Cloudstack - it's rock solid solution. Definitely Openstack or Cloudstack Andrew N. - Senior System Administrator Are you in need of an urgent help? 10 minutes response time! EmergencySupport - Professional Server Management and One-time Services I'm using proxmox. Not really "cloud" technology, but more like vmware. but they have incorporing many cloud technologies (HA, cluster, CEPH, cloud-init). So if you want a more legacy infra model like vmware, proxmox is very flexible. Openstack is a different aproach, and more "devops" model for my eyes... Proxmox in combination with a ceph cluster is certainly worth investigating. They have it included in their GUI and looks quite promising. As the OP hasn't been back to the thread in months, closed