Hi PVE Devs,
For the last three years, I've kept a keen eye on new high performance computing hardware and modern virtualization techniques. In recent years, previously inaccessible technologies such as DPUs have become more readily available, enabling even medium size businesses to acquire NICs that can run operating systems. We approach an Era where offloading functions like firewalls, compression, encryption, and emulation become far more realistic while simultaneously more important with higher throughput NICs.
Given DPUs with multiple ARM cores, 2-16GB of RAM and local storage, when will PVE begin implementing future virtualization tools and architectures that leverage running functions or the entire hypervisor on hardware such as a DPU? Has there been any exploration in this field? AWS is about a decade ahead in this regard, but the hardware to DIY is now available as commodity (e.g. NVIDIA Bluefield).
Thanks, I'm eager to hear exciting news on this front.
Tmanok
For the last three years, I've kept a keen eye on new high performance computing hardware and modern virtualization techniques. In recent years, previously inaccessible technologies such as DPUs have become more readily available, enabling even medium size businesses to acquire NICs that can run operating systems. We approach an Era where offloading functions like firewalls, compression, encryption, and emulation become far more realistic while simultaneously more important with higher throughput NICs.
Given DPUs with multiple ARM cores, 2-16GB of RAM and local storage, when will PVE begin implementing future virtualization tools and architectures that leverage running functions or the entire hypervisor on hardware such as a DPU? Has there been any exploration in this field? AWS is about a decade ahead in this regard, but the hardware to DIY is now available as commodity (e.g. NVIDIA Bluefield).
Thanks, I'm eager to hear exciting news on this front.
Tmanok