Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 1 March 2019

MAAS – Fast and efficient virtualisation for small and medium enterprises


The advent of virtualisation has significantly changed the way we use IT infrastructure. In theory, the ability to share single server resources to run multiple isolated operating systems provides flexibility and promises easy operations. However, in practice, managing virtualised infrastructure can be quite expensive and complex as a result of numerous features that require deep technical knowledge and extensive training. The challenge is even more evident when it is necessary to manage distributed infrastructure with only a handful of servers installed in every location.

Use cases range from enterprise applications and content delivery, to point of sale systems and shared file systems. Organisations are challenged with determining if their use case warrants the overhead and complexity that comes with complex virtualisation solutions, and if all of the optional features, prescriptive architecture, proprietary functionality and per-feature licensing, are truly required.

MAAS addresses the gap though use of KVM Pods.  This solution allows administrators to utilise a physical host as a dedicated hypervisor and quickly create multiple KVM-based virtual machines. Based on workload requirements, infrastructure operators can easily allocate resources such as CPU, RAM and storage. This functionality extends and supplements the way MAAS manages physical infrastructure, as KVM Pods can reside side-by-side with dedicated bare-metal servers sharing the same network environment MAAS detects and configures.

KVM Pod hosting two virtual machines

On-demand, simple and automated creation of virtual machines provides businesses with the infrastructure needed for back office applications and can follow the same operation processes utilised for real servers. KVM Pods are a great example of technology abstracting complexity of hypervisor configuration and delivering resources when and how organisations need them.

To learn more about KVM Pods and how to use them for SME needs, please try the latest MAAS release at maas.io and KVM Pods tutorial.

Contact us to learn more

Related posts


Rhys Knipe
7 July 2026

Ubuntu Server: a platform made for enterprise scale

Ubuntu Article

A platform is an environment that allows software to run smoothly across the infrastructure, runtime, and application layers. The key word there is “smoothly”: a good platform connects those layers so well that you don’t notice it. That’s what Ubuntu Server has become: the essential layer between bare metal and the apps running on top, ...


David Beamonte
28 May 2026

VMware hypervisor deployment using MAAS

MAAS Ubuntu tech blog

Most modern datacenters are inherently heterogeneous. VMware environments coexist with container platforms, databases, and other bare-metal workloads, often on the same hardware over several years. Servers are bought once, but their role changes as requirements evolve. However, ESXi (the VMware hypervisor) provisioning is often handled se ...


David Beamonte
11 March 2026

The bare metal problem in AI Factories

MAAS Ubuntu tech blog

As AI platforms grow into large-scale “AI Factories,” the real bottleneck shifts from model design to operational complexity. With expensive GPU accelerators, hardware failures and inconsistent configurations lead directly to lost throughput and reduced return on investment. While Kubernetes orchestrates workloads, it cannot fix broken ph ...