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On 06/10/15 13:56, Hermann Himmelbauer wrote:<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:5613B6D4.9050604@qwer.tk" type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Am 06.10.2015 um 13:53 schrieb Dimitris Beletsiotis:
</pre>
<blockquote type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Hi there,____
__ __
Correct me if I am wrong but below solutions (Windows TS and Linux X
clients) are not VDI with Proxmox.__
Windows Terminal services and Linux X desktops are totally different and
can be implemented on every virtualization platform (or bare metal).
The advantage of using Proxmox with Spice is the integration between the
virtualization environment and the (thin) client's desktop/experience.
VDI is more appealing on platforms like VMware Horizon where desktop and
applications are virtualized and management of images is much easier
(with high cost of course :-) )
</pre>
</blockquote>
<pre wrap="">
Exactly. And that was my initial question - if anyone has any idea of
how to implement this with Proxmox or if he already has done this.
AFAIK Redhat provides some kind of KVM/SPICE-based solution, although I
doubt that it's ready for production?
Best Regards,
Hermann
</pre>
</blockquote>
Well, I wrote about x2go client because I found it better in network
traffic than spice client itself.<br>
<br>
Two years ago we implemented a very simple spice-based application
which asked for a credentials and connected to proxmox using those
credentials and then it shown the VMs where that user could connect
to, as many users only have one VM (or VDI in this case), the
desktop showed directly.<br>
That was done with bash and zenity mainly, on the forums is said how
to download the proxmox ticket from the command line and use it as
parameter to remote-viewer.<br>
<br>
So, if you want a spice approach, it can be done by you with some
work, I do not know if Proxmox team will develop a desktop client
for this in the future, but it can be acomplished with some bash
scripting or using promox API.<br>
<br>
Anyway, <span id="result_box" class="short_text" lang="en"><span
class="hps">I</span> <span class="hps">reiterate, spice client
is... "network expensive", and you'll need a good connection to
work properly, in a LAN it shouldn't be a problem, but for
remote clients is unbearable.<br>
</span></span>
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