I intended to make Ovirt Node work since it is based off of Centos but within 10 minutes of install I am having to vim /etc/hosts and set Ip address to hostnames because I need to bypass FQDN requirements. Then I need to set up the Ovirt Engine which requires a lot of resources. I still do not know what purposes it serves. An hour later and I still have not spun up a VM. At this point I am starting to think I shouldn't use this platform.
I scrapped Ovirt and spun up a Proxmox host. I will add a big tip here. Login to your router when during the Proxmox install and reserve the IP it is using. This will effectively bind that private Ip to the MAC address of the Proxmox host. This step is super important.
Once you are done installing Proxmox all the network configurations are done for you automatically. You do not have to set up a bridge between host and Vms. I was able to install Proxmox and spin up a Vm in about 15 minutes with full network connectivity. The GUI also looks very nice. You can access a shell environment, connect via Spice, watch your host resources. Everything you need is available and ready to use.
I scrapped Ovirt and spun up a Proxmox host. I will add a big tip here. Login to your router when during the Proxmox install and reserve the IP it is using. This will effectively bind that private Ip to the MAC address of the Proxmox host. This step is super important.
Once you are done installing Proxmox all the network configurations are done for you automatically. You do not have to set up a bridge between host and Vms. I was able to install Proxmox and spin up a Vm in about 15 minutes with full network connectivity. The GUI also looks very nice. You can access a shell environment, connect via Spice, watch your host resources. Everything you need is available and ready to use.
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