« first day (1879 days earlier)      last day (3388 days later) » 

00:53
Anyone care to explain to me how serverfault.com/questions/733438/… is more appropriate on superuser rather than server fault? And really, how many home users use ESXi or VLANs?
hm
I actually concur...
@EEAA I'd like to kick ^ back to SF. Its almost certainly more in your scope than mine
ahh
@mattburnett: I think it might be cause its nested ESXi in workstation?
Dosen't quite sound like a production setup
Dosen't quite feel like it belongs more on SU than SF tho
What're you doing with it?
(Hi, I'm an SU mod)
lab work, admitted at home, but really, how many home users have cisco networks or even know what esxi is?
*admittedly
>_>
1. No, tho I've toyed with replacing my home setup with enterpriseish gear.
2. I'd be running it but my particular setup's terrible. I use KVM instead.
i've got dual E5 xeons and 160gb ram :)
My home server would neatly fit in your power supply
01:00
lol
Anyway, ignoring the fact that its running at home, I'll wait a bit for some feedback before I kick it back. Wouldn't want the question kicked back then closed on SF no?
meh, just seems silly that i'm being told to go to a place where the majority of the users wont have any idea what i'm talking about, and i wont get any response without a bounty
lol
I can move it over right now
If you want
As I said, slight risk of closure, but I'll add a comment.
Oh wait
slight risk of closure?
sorry, it wasn't migrated
(I've not had my coffee yet >_>)
Anyway, dosen't seem appropriate for SU, where my coffee-less addled state thought it was migrated to.
(AKA, I dun goofed)
01:08
So whats your advice for me?
01:19
regarding what i should do with my question? feel like i'm getting picked on just because its nested inside of workstation rather than another esxi instance
serverfault.com/help/on-topic says "managing the hardware or software of servers, workstations, storage or networks" and I can only assume ESXi and VLAN trunks, etc would qualify
And it does seem like Workstation is getting picked on for no good reason. You can see superuser.com/questions/757882/… which is vaguely similar to mine was migrated from SF, the question is over a year old, has 3,500+ views, 0 comments or answers because just about no one on that site has any clue what a VLAN is
Gentlemen.
hey EEAA
guess we can move this to the room i created unless you'd think it would be appropriate to have the discussion here
nah, keep it here so @JourneymanGeek can tag along.
so...
No one really uses this room now anyway ;)
01:31
anyways, can you help me understand how this was inapproriate for SF?
ESXi-nested-in-ESXi is sort of a supported configuration (officially). ESXi-in-VMware Workstation is not.
It's a rickety setup at best, and honestly, I very much doubt that your proposed setup can be made to work at all.
i dont think something being offically supported is relevant as to whether or not the question is relevant to SF rather than SU
It's not anything you'd ever see in a professional environment.
A full cisco network with ESXi instances isnt anything you'd ever likely see in a home environment
we actually have a close reason for not using "reasonable business information technology management practices"
right - I'm not saying it's appropriate for SU either
your question unfortunately fits into a no-mans-land of sorts.
01:33
there is nothing in the closure reason about "reasonable"
it says "Questions on Server Fault must be about managing information technology systems in a business environment."
i know
right, which it's not. I could have also chose the "reasonable practices" close reason as well. Unfortunately it only lets me choose one. They're both applicable.
so my bastard child of question has no place on SE?
*of a question
well, you might take it as a clue that you should change up your architecture.
I can't speak to its topicality on any site but SF, though. (as my rep on other sites would indicate) :)
its for lab work/getting familiar with vsphere
not really intended for production
right, which is still off-topic.
Listen, your question isn't bad, and you aren't a bad person for doing things this way. It's just not on-topic for SF.
though, if I take off my SF mod hat for a minute and put on my VMware admin hat...
01:38
and how does preventing people from answering it make the community better?
I'd recommend that if you want to familiarize yourself with ESXi, deploy it in as close to a way as you would in production. a.k.a. bare metal installation.
ok, back to the SF mod hat.
i'd actually do a bare metal installation if i could pass my gtx 980s thru, sadly nvidia makes you have quaddros for that
SF has a very specific charter, and we do our best to stick to it. Non-production, non-professional, home lab environments are not part of that charter. I understand that you want to get your question answered. I truly do. However, if we start allowing questions like this, we will soon become "tech support for the internet". We've been there before and it was horrible. We won't be going back.
doing a search on SF for "lab" gives 1800+ results, with a handful closed, the rest open/answered
I may just cull through those later to identify those which need to be closed.
also, the existence of the word "lab" does not deem a question OT
01:43
you said "non-production" a lab would inherently be non-production
not if it's an academic IT employee supporting a computer lab. I'm not going to argue with you about the topicality of this. IMHO your question was off-topic for at least two reasons.
serverfault.com/questions/529734/sccm-2012-virtual-lab is 2 years old and isnt about a academic environemnt
Matt - honestly.
there are likely hundreds of questions in your search that should be closed.
jusy sayin
I'm not going to debate each of those right now.
feel free to flag them for closure if you'd like.
01:47
i'm not the one who feels it is outside the bounds of SF
questions slip through the cracks. SF charter changes over time. Things eventually get cleaned up and closed when appropriate, but none of us are getting paid for this. The mods and other users with close vote privileges do this on an hour or two a day.
so...
as I said, I'm not going to argue with you here about your question.
i'm aware, but if the community concured with your opinion then the problem would be self solving as no one would answer it
which would make the closure redundnat
*redundant
if people did respond then obviously they would feel as if it belonged
OK, last statement on this. IMHO your question was off-topic for at least two reasons. If you feel your question was closed un-justly, you're always welcome to come to meta.serverfault.com and state your case. If the community agrees that the question should be allowed, I'll gladly re-open it.
what were the two reasons? 1 was the non-production, non-professional home lab
not sure what the 2nd was
"reasonable business information technology management practices"
01:53
<sigh> reasonableness is no way against the rules
anyways i'll post it to meta and give you a link in a few mins if you want to add your two cents
No need to send the link - mods get a notification for any new meta questions.
I hope you understand that I'm not out to get you.
When agreeing to be a SF mod, I agreed to uphold the site's charter to the best of my ability.
i know its nothing personal but still
...which is what I'm doing.
pretty sure that my question wont lead to SF becoming the tech support of the internet, SU is that
anyways thanks for you input, even if i grosslyd ont agree with it
better than the drive by downvoting with no explanation
regarding your last comment about SF becoming internet tech support:
The broken windows theory is a criminological theory of the norm-setting and signaling effect of urban disorder and vandalism on additional crime and anti-social behavior. The theory states that maintaining and monitoring urban environments to prevent small crimes such as vandalism, public drinking, and toll-jumping helps to create an atmosphere of order and lawfulness, thereby preventing more serious crimes from happening. The theory was introduced in a 1982 article by social scientists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling. Since then it has been subject to great debate both within the social...
we're obviously not dealing with criminal behavior here, but the same thing applies.
01:59
using that fallacy isnt exactly the best argument
The broken windows theory is a criminological theory of the norm-setting and signaling effect of urban disorder and vandalism on additional crime and anti-social behavior. The theory states that maintaining and monitoring urban environments to prevent small crimes such as vandalism, public drinking, and toll-jumping helps to create an atmosphere of order and lawfulness, thereby preventing more serious crimes from happening. The theory was introduced in a 1982 article by social scientists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling. Since then it has been subject to great debate both within the social...
sigh silly chat rewriting my links, anyways scroll down to criticism of that theory in the article
Every theory has its criticisms. That doesn't mean we've not experienced the direct effects of it on SF.
02:22
EEAA, you still there?
VMware Workstation is marketed to run nested ESXi
"Experiment by running multiple operating systems and applications, or run enterprise-focused hypervisors like ESXi as virtual machines to build a personal lab while preparing for VMware Certification tests (i.e. VCP). "
k, that's great. Still doesn't make it on-topic.
just saying regarding resonableness
well, it's still quite un-reasonable in a non-training, non-lab environment.
it may be supported by VMware. That doesn't make it a good idea outside of a few very specific situations.
it was a lab environment...
right...which are off-topic
02:25
lab environments arent listed as such here serverfault.com/help/on-topic
Matt, I'm done trying to help you understand topicality on SF. I'll be looking forward to your meta question.
I feel like you're taking this quite personally.
why not reach out to VMware support?
i have my reasons
well ok then
02:31
0
Q: Where do questions regarding labs for enterprise equipment & software belong if not SF?

matt burnettSo this is in regards to Nested ESXi - VLAN Trunking Not Working, which was closed because it was considered off topic. I had a chance to discuss this with EEAA, one of the two people who voted to close it. His criticisms of the question had to do with it being "non-production, non-professional, ...

please let me know if I misinterpreted your statements
ty
@mattburnett: wikipedia links and others onebox. Add something before them and they won't
thanks
anyways i'm pretty sure workstation just isnt supporting vlan tagged packets
errr.... nevermind, thought of what was going on wrong
it might but im guessing its not
lol the meta question is up for a couple minutes, already 1 downvote
is this really inappropriate for meta too?
@mattburnett: that might have been my first port of call
On metas, downvotes work differently
Downvotes = I disagree
rather than "This is a terrible question and needs to be slightly punished"
02:44
thanks for the explanation
eeaa, how is that ad hominem?
ad ho·mi·nem
ˌad ˈhämənəm/
adverb & adjective
1.
(of an argument or reaction) directed against a person rather than the position they are maintaining.
his position was that "he didnt care" while in another post saying that SF is overly hostile to new users
03:04
lol eeaa, now it seems like you're the one taking things personally
if sven is resorting to name calling, i can hardly think he isnt demonstrating a hostile attitude

« first day (1879 days earlier)      last day (3388 days later) »