- Jan 15, 2001
- 15,069
- 94
- 91
I'm setting up a virtualized environment for a small business and I need to make a choice regarding the hypervisor fairly soon. I'm torn at the moment.
I know and understand vSphere + vCenter, but it's awfully expensive. For that reason, HyperV is attractive, but I don't have any experience with it. Normally, I'd say the lack of experience is enough to simply go with what I know, but this is a small business and $5,500 for a license isn't exactly an easy sell especially when a free alternative exists. With that said, is HyperV actually free? Google says yes and no, but I can't figure out why.
My main concern is with failure scenarios. vSphere Essentials Plus comes with high availability, vMotion, etc. that make VM migrations dead simple. The other major benefit is vSAN. I see these things listed on the HyperV 2016 feature list, but I don't have any experience with them so it's hard to know how much of it is hot air.
I'm not opposed to learning something new and I don't have any irrational biases about vendor choice. The cost of vSphere severely diminishes my ability to upgrade network hardware, which is part of the concern. In short, I'm trying to make the best long term decision both technically and financially.
I know and understand vSphere + vCenter, but it's awfully expensive. For that reason, HyperV is attractive, but I don't have any experience with it. Normally, I'd say the lack of experience is enough to simply go with what I know, but this is a small business and $5,500 for a license isn't exactly an easy sell especially when a free alternative exists. With that said, is HyperV actually free? Google says yes and no, but I can't figure out why.
My main concern is with failure scenarios. vSphere Essentials Plus comes with high availability, vMotion, etc. that make VM migrations dead simple. The other major benefit is vSAN. I see these things listed on the HyperV 2016 feature list, but I don't have any experience with them so it's hard to know how much of it is hot air.
I'm not opposed to learning something new and I don't have any irrational biases about vendor choice. The cost of vSphere severely diminishes my ability to upgrade network hardware, which is part of the concern. In short, I'm trying to make the best long term decision both technically and financially.