Xcp is a lot stricter, for good or bad. For proxmox it's fine to have networks on each host that looks roughly the same. For xcp, the network has to ne 1:1 equal to be in the same pool. This makes proxmox much easier to deal with administratively. But for xcp the upside is that there's no guesswork involved, which is much more stable. Not that proxmox is unstable, but it's not like it never crashes. I have yet to see xcp crash even once over several years I've messed with it.
EtherMan
joined 2 years ago
Yea never complain about the people that won't buy cheap. It just makes it cheaper with less demand :)