Both of those are too not great when using the desktops, but are rock solid on the long run and this is what matters to the people developing it. What Proxmox does best is give you stability over the long period, just as ESXi or XenServer. Yes, you can also pass-through your VGA but that's a specific, very specific usecase. Now, yes, windows servers have a GUI, but still there's not a lot of optimization being carried out to make it lag free or close to that. Proxmox is an enterprise grade hypervisor, and as such it's thought out to be virtualizing servers. I'll add my 2 cents because by rapidly scanning the thread I didn't see anyone mentioning it.īesides finding what works best, and it seems you got it in the end, what I always think when I see posts like this one is, are you sure you didn't chose the wrong tool? Display: VirtIO-GPU (virtio,memory=512) Storage: 64GB on SSD from host (local-lvm) CPU: 2 socket, 4 cores, numa=1 (8 VCPU's) PVE Manager Version: pve-manager/7.1-7/df5740ad Storage: 256GB SATA SSD PVE Configuration Is there anything that can do to improve the performance of VM's? PVE Hardware I am connected to the VM over RDP, not the console. Moving the install between an SSD and ISCSI running off of 7.2k SAS doesn't make a significant change to this lag. Adding a VirtIO-GPU seems to help slightly but there is still a significant lag/framerate issue. The VM does not seem to be bottlenecked by the CPU, sitting at around 15%-20%. First post video didn't upload video, this post didn't upload my text and I cannot edit it in so I will post it here.Īny OS (Windows 10, Debian, Ubuntu, NixOS) and desktop environment (Windows 10, Gnome, KDE) has a very noticeable lag/framerate issue when interacting with the desktop. I am in noway a NixOS expert as you can tell, but I hope this is of some help. If your new install has something wrong with it, you can load into your old install. Upon each rebuilding of your NixOS install, your old instance still exists, fully as it did. You do not install packages like Debian distributions using apt install PACKAGENAME, you add the package you want to install into your configuration.nix and rebuild your entire NixOS install. What is not necessarily easy is learning another language (nix) and a whole new way to install packages, enable services, and configure software. I have tested other people's NixOS setups that were posted on GitHub, and it really is as easy as copying the configuration.nix and dotfiles into your home directory. This is done by setting up your /etc/nixos/configuration.nix file exactly how you want it (well, that and dotfiles). What I like about it and why I want to fully migrate over to NixOS is that your system is fully repeatable/recreatable. As with any Linux distribution, it runs very smooth OOTB, especially when you compare it to the likes of Windows. It is a much different OS compared to any other linux distros that I have used in the past (Debian, Ubuntu, Arch, Artix, centos). TBH, I haven't had the time to really sit down and configure it how I like.
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