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Robin Wauters

Next Microsoft Virtual Server slips to 2007

March 29, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Microsoft has delayed an update for Microsoft Virtual Server until early 2007.

Reported by Stephen Shankland at Cnet News.Com in an interview with James Ni, group product manager for server virtualization at Microsoft.

” The Service Pack 1 update to Virtual Server 2005 R2 will include support for two chip features, Intel’s Virtualization and Advanced Micro Devices’ Virtualization, that ease the task. Previously it had been scheduled to arrive in the fourth quarter, but a Microsoft representative confirmed the slip on Tuesday.

The postponement comes on the heels of Microsoft’s delays of Windows Vista and Office 2007. “Quality always takes priority over timeline,” the Microsoft representative said.

Microsoft’s top competitors have suffered similar setbacks. Market leader VMware had planned to release its next top-end ESX Server product, version 3.0, by the end of March but gave itself three more months. The other major competitor, the open-source Xen project, had planned to release its version 3.0 by August 2005 but in fact didn’t release it until December. ”

….

“The beta version of SP1 still is scheduled to arrive in the second quarter, said James Ni, group product manager for server virtualization at Microsoft.

The new version also will include Volume Shadow Services, which lets all a computer’s virtual machines be backed up simultaneously, Ni said. The feature also permits the graceful restart of all those virtual machines, letting customers rely on the software without having to worry as much about the consequences of server failure.

“Basically, it allows us to do a snapshot of all the virtual machines running on a host. Then you can use something like Virtual Server with Data Protection Manager to create good backup and recovery,” Ni said. “You can recover the entire host and all the virtual machines running in a very orchestrated fashion.”

Microsoft faces major competition in the market from EMC subsidiary VMware and increasingly the Xen project that’s being built into forthcoming versions of Suse Linux Enterprise Server and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Microsoft is working hard for a piece of the action, however. In December, it cut prices of Virtual Server 2005 R2 from $999 to $199 for the Enterprise Edition and $499 to $99 for the Standard Edition. The Standard Edition runs on servers with up to four processors, while Enterprise is for larger machines.

At the same time, though, market leader VMware is making its own moves. It released its Player software for free, which lets people download and try out virtual machines preconfigured with software, and made its GSX Server product into the free VMware Server. That product competes directly with Microsoft Virtual Server; VMware still charges for its higher-end ESX Server.

Much of Microsoft’s attention is directed toward the future with a successor, the Microsoft hypervisor, code-named Viridian. Virtual Server requires Windows as a foundation, but hypervisors are lower-level software. ESX Server and Xen both employ the hypervisor approach.

One major change coming with Viridian will be support for 64-bit virtual machines, Ni said. That will catch Microsoft up with Xen and VMware, which support 64-bit virtual machines today.

Viridian isn’t likely to debut until 2008 at the earliest, however. It’s designed to work with the upcoming Longhorn Server, a server-oriented version of Windows Vista that’s scheduled to arrive in 2007, but it’s more likely to arrive with a service pack sometime 18 to 24 months afterward, Ni said.

“We’re not committing to whether the hypervisor is part of the initial release or not. Right now, from a scheduling perspective, it doesn’t look like it,” Ni said.

Read the full article at source.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: EMC, intel, microsoft, microsoft virtual server, OS, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Virtual Server RDP Administration Annoyance

March 22, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Quoting from a Q&A column from Chris Wolf at MCPmag.com

Question to Chris:

I’m having a strange problem with the Virtual Server 2005 Administration Web Site. I’m accessing the server remotely using remote desktop and can connect fine. However, when I try and open the virtual server administration web site from within the RDP session, I get a “Page Cannot be Found” error. Other users on the local LAN don’t have any problem accessing the site using IE. Is this one of those strange Terminal Services problems?
— Steve

Anwer to Steve:

Your prediction is right on the money. Remote Desktop and Terminal Services can do some strange things. Many of us at one time or another have found ourselves scratching our heads over a particular program or installation sequence that would not work when launched from within a Remote Desktop connection.

With your particular problem, connecting to the Virtual Server host using IE directly or through a VPN connection would be your best bet. If this isn’t possible, you can get the Virtual Server Administration Web site to run inside an RDP session by running the RDP session as a remote IE console. In other words, you’ll need to configure Remote Desktop to launch IE at the time the RDP connection is made. While this will prevent you from accessing the actual desktop of the remote Virtual Server host, it will allow you to access the Administration website through the RDP connection. You can always set up a second RDP connection for complete access to the Virtual Server host’s desktop.

Instructions

To set up Remote Desktop to start IE once a connection is made, follow these steps:

  1. 1. Click Start | All Programs | Accessories | Communications | Remote Desktop.
  2. 2. In the Remote Desktop Connection dialog box, click the Options button.
  3. 3. Now click the Programs tab in the Remote Desktop Connection dialog box.
  4. 4. Click the “Start the following program on connection” checkbox and enter the following information:

    Program Path and File Name:
    iexplore.exe https://localhost/virtualserver/vswebapp.exe

    Start in the Following Folder:
    C:Program FilesInternet Explorer
    5. Now click the General tab and enter the name or IP address of your virtual server in the Computer Name field.

  5. 6. Enter a user name and password (check the Save My Password box if desired), and then click the Save As button. In the Save As dialog box, browse to your desired save location such as the Desktop, enter a name for the connection such as RDPIE.rdp, and click Save.

At this point, you can double-click on the saved RDP connection to initiate an RDP connection to your virtual server host. I like to save RDP connection settings so that I don’t have to retype them over and over again, which could interfere with any personal tasks I’m trying to do while at work.

Note that I’m assuming an HTTPS connection here (shown in Step 4). The default method for connecting would be via HTTP; however, my Virtual Server Web site is configured to only allow SSL. If you’re looking for a simple way to set up SSL support for Virtual Server, take a look at the article, “Configure SSL for Virtual Server 2005 Using SelfSSL,” at thelazyadmin.com.

With Remote Desktop configured to launch IE and connect to the Virtual Server Administration Web site once you log on, you’ll see IE open up inside the Remote Desktop window once your login is authenticated. If you close IE, you’ll automatically be logged off from the RDP session.

With this approach, you’ll be able to access and work with the Virtual Server Administration Web site through a Remote Desktop connection. For some, seeing an application work correctly when run as a stand-alone program via RDP when it does not work in a normal RDP session, is considered nearly magical. Who knows? Maybe even David Blaine can show off a little RDP trickery as part of his street magic.

Chris Wolf, MCSE, MCT, CCNA, is an instructor with ECPI Technical College and a leading industry consultant and writer in the areas of enterprise storage, virtualization solutions and network infrastructure management…

Filed Under: People Tagged With: Chris Wolf, virtual server, virtual server 2005, virtualisation, virtualization

Are Grid Computing & Virtualization Blending?

March 21, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

The synergy between Grid computing and virtualization is becoming more and more apparent and is starting to find common ground in Linux.

At Novell’s Brainshare conference, virtualization is taking the spot light.  In fact, Dell made an announcement that it will offer Novell ZENworks for Linux servers.

Adam Fineberg’s (Levanta) view was reported by InfoWorld

Adam Fineberg (Vice President of Engineering at Levanta) sees specific technical reasons why Linux has become the most widely used OS for Grid environments:”Some of the key aspects of an operating system that you really need take advantage of in a Grid computing environment are the networking and file systems. The networking side is very important because of the large number of nodes, the need to quickly / easily add more nodes, exchange information between the nodes with low latency, as well as access shared storage systems and devices. Linux does very good ‘zero copy’ networking, meaning that once the data reaches the network stack, it doesn’t have to be copied again all the way through the rest of the operating system. That really keeps the networking efficient in Linux systems. With respect to file systems — because of the very strong interface that’s defined within Linux, there are a great number of file systems that are available for you. And that’s something that’s fairly unique to the Linux OS. Most of the operating systems don’t actually have a large number of file systems available for them, other than some standard ones like NFS. That makes it relatively easy to pick a file system that’s well-suited for your particular application. So having access to, for instance, XFS or JFS — which are two very high performance file systems that have good characteristics, but by the same token have very different implementations and therefore very different operating characteristics — you can optimize by choosing the file system that’s best suited for your application.”

The embracing of Linux by the Grid / Virtualization community boils down to being able to understand the boundary values of this set of complex use-case equations. Linux, being open source, lets you get at the raw OS kernel code. This gives you access to the “boundaries” of the OS, the way it interfaces to applications and the hardware. An intimate understanding of these boundary conditions are critical to Grid and Virtualization…

Read this full article at source.

Filed Under: News, People Tagged With: Adam Fineberg, BrainShare, BrainShare 2006, Dell, Grid Computing, Levanta, linux, Linux OS, Linux Server, Novell, Novell ZEN, virtualisation, virtualization

How to build a Virtual Private Server (VPS) With Debian 3.1 (Sarge) And OpenVZ

March 21, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Till Brehm has released an essential how-to at HowToForge.Com for installing OpenVZ, the open source version of SWsoft Virtuozzo, on a Linux Debian 3.1 32bit operating system.

It starts from the very beginning step, patching kernel, up to the final goal, building a so-called Virtual Private Server (VPS). With OpenVZ you can create multiple Virtual Private Servers (VPS) on the same hardware, similar to Xen and the Linux Vserver project. OpenVZ is the open-source branch of Virtuozzo, a commercial virtualization solution used by many providers that offer virtual servers. The OpenVZ kernal patch is licensed under the GPL license, and the user-level tools are under the QPL license. He clearly warns that this is not the only way of setting up such a system and issues no guarantee that this will work for you 🙂

Read how it worked for him.

Filed Under: Guest Posts, News, People Tagged With: GPL License, Linux Debian, openvz, QPL License, swsoft, SWSoft Virtuozzo, Till Brehm, Virtual Private Server, virtualisation, virtualization, Virtuozzo

Novell Announces Support for Xen 3.0 in SUSE Linux Enterprise v10

March 20, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Press Release from Novell at BrainShare® 2006

SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 delivers new features for mission-critical operations, including Xen virtualization, improved performance and the industry’s easiest-to-use application security

SALT LAKE CITY —20 Mar 2006—Novell today introduced its next-generation platform for the open enterprise, SUSE® Linux Enterprise 10. Novell’s SUSE Linux Enterprise is a secure and reliable foundation for enterprise computing from the desktop to the data center. It will be first to deliver fully supported Linux* innovations such as Xen virtualization, exceptional performance and scalability, application-level security, and improved desktop usability. As a result, organizations will be able to experience the flexibility, power and reliability of the best-engineered Linux, backed by Novell’s industry-leading support, services and training.

“Novell has a broad vision for open enterprise computing, and no other Linux vendor has a comparable lineup of enterprise-class solutions that address the pressing needs of today’s IT executives,” said Jack Messman, chairman and CEO of Novell. “SUSE Linux Enterprise is the platform for the open enterprise. It delivers powerful solutions built on open standards for all of the most important technology arenas within today’s enterprise – data center, workgroup, desktop, security and identity, and resource management.”…

Virtualization

SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 is the first enterprise platform to include a fully integrated and supported version of Xen 3.0, the emerging open source standard for virtualization services. Xen 3.0 lets organizations consolidate multiple workloads on a single server. With Xen 3.0, customers can configure applications and systems for maximum efficiency. According to Gartner, the average data center server runs at 20 percent of capacity. With Xen virtualization on SUSE Linux Enterprise, customers will have the ability to increase server utilization to nearly 70 percent.
“SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 is the first enterprise Linux distribution to offer full commercial support for the industry’s fastest and most secure virtualization technology, the open source Xen 3.0 hypervisor,” said Simon Crosby, CTO of XenSource. “With Xen 3.0, SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 can take full advantage of Intel and AMD hardware support for virtualization, delivering bare-metal virtualization performance to enterprise customers. Novell is a trusted partner to XenSource, and we look forward to working closely with Novell to deliver compelling virtualization solutions to enterprise customers.”…

Read the original press release at Novell.com

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: BrainShare, BrainShare 2006, Jack Messman, Novell, SUSE, SUSE Linux, SUSE Linux Enterprise 10, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen virtualization

Red Hat Isn’t Exhibiting ‘Xen’-Ophobia

March 20, 2006 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Quoting Jason Brooks from eWeek:

Red Hat’s announcement March 14 of its integrated virtualization push, starring Xen, didn’t take anyone by surprise: Red Hat, along with just about everybody else, has been tooting the Xen horn ever since the fledgling open-source virtualization technology began grabbing headlines almost a year ago.
…
The trouble is that Xen is somewhat early on in its development, and the high rate of change in Xen’s code base will keep the technology out of the mainstream Linux kernel for some time.

Red Hat has and will continue to chart its own course with respect to the kernel, diverging from the mainstream where and when appropriate, but Xen’s potential will remain somewhat stunted for as long as it remains in heavy flux…

I’d like to see Red Hat add to its virtualization agenda the OpenVZ project—a GPL’d code base born of SWsoft’s 5-year-old commercial Virtuozzo product, which itself is roughly comparable to the containers in Sun Microsystems’ Solaris 10…

 OpenVZ, which also is vying for inclusion in the mainstream Linux kernel, would complement Xen well and has impressed me in the initial testing I’ve conducted.

Ultimately, it might make the most sense for Red Hat to deploy both Xen and OpenVZ. The complementary technologies would be a good counterbalance to the Xen/container combo I expect to see eventually in Solaris…

Read the whole article at eWeek.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: amd, fedora core 5, integrated virtualization, intel, linux kernel, network appliance, open source, openvz, red hat, swsoft, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, xensource

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