Difference between revisions of "Virtual Appliances Overview"
From OpenEMR Project Wiki
|
|
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| A virtual appliance is a copy of an operating system and a set of applications (e.g. OpenEMR), installed, configured, and packaged together into a single download. The virtual appliance runs inside a virtual machine. The virtual machine makes each virtual appliance think it is running on it's own computer. Some of the advantages are:
| | {{Template:ForwardingOpenEMR}} |
| | |
| * snapshots - you can easily save the entire state of the OS and applications as many times as you want
| |
| * hardware portability - your virtual appliance can be easily moved to another computer, no worrying about drivers or having the same hardware
| |
| * running multiple OSs at once - run linux and windows at the same time without having to reboot
| |
| * isolation - keep problems in one OS or applications from affecting others
| |
| * easy remote control - you can start, stop, or reset virtual machines remotely
| |
| * OpenEMR Virtual Appliances can be run on any Operating System that supports [http://www.vmware.com/products/player VMware Player] or [http://www.virtualbox.org VirtualBox].
| |
| * Did I mention yet that [http://www.vmware.com/products/player VMware Player] and [http://www.virtualbox.org VirtualBox] are FREE.
| |
| * VMware's explanation of a Virtual Appliance at : http://www.vmware.com/appliances/getting-started/learn/overview.html
| |
| | |
| | |
| [[Category:Appliance]]
| |
Revision as of 09:28, 23 January 2012