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Date:      Mon, 21 Dec 2009 09:49:43 -0500
From:      Robert Fitzpatrick <robert@webtent.com>
To:        Steve Polyack <korvus@comcast.net>
Cc:        FreeBSD <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: slow clock on FreeBSD 7.2 on vmware
Message-ID:  <4B2F8B07.6080309@webtent.com>
In-Reply-To: <4B2A9C1E.2010509@comcast.net>
References:  <4B23CD8A.50203@webtent.com> <op.u4zhl8bq5wvplz@jam-laptop> <4B291EB5.5040605@webtent.com> <4B2A9C1E.2010509@comcast.net>

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On 12/17/2009 4:01 PM, Steve Polyack wrote:
> On 12/16/09 12:53, Robert Fitzpatrick wrote:
>>> I run multiple FreeBSD servers inside VMWare and I don't have this
>>> problem. Are you running VMWare workstation? Or ESX/ESXi?
>>
>> I am running VMware Server 2.0...thanks again.
>
> I would really recommend switching to VMware ESXi if at all possible. I
> have a lot of FreeBSD VMs running under ESXi 3.5 and 4.0 that work just
> great with kern.hz=100 and openntpd.

I loaded ESXi and a FreeBSD 8.0 guest last night and this morning it is 
still keeping time OK without any changes to loader.conf.

>
> We actually kept everything running on Linux+VMware Server 1.0 until we
> could make the switch to ESXi; the VMware Server 2.0 product wasn't
> reliable for us at all and was a total pain to manage.

I am using vSphere to manage, but I see even the standard version 
requires licensing in the amount of $795. Is there a free management 
software, or better yet, a way to manage via Linux? That's definitely 
something I like about VMware Server, that I can manage via a browser. I 
have not had any major problems with VMware Server 2.0 all running on 
CentOS 5.x hosts.

--Robert



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