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Microsoft Opened Up Virtualization For Vista Under Court Pressure

March 11, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

Earlier this year, Microsoft surprisingly flip-flopped its earlier decision not to allow users to run Vista Home Basic and Vista Home Premium as guest operating systems on a virtual machine. According to Computerworld, court documents now prove MS did this because of a complaint filed with antitrust regulators.

According to a status report filed with U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, Microsoft changed the end-user licensing agreements (EULA) of Vista Home Basic and Vista Home Premium under pressure from Phoenix Technologies Ltd. Phoenix, best known for the BIOS, or firmware, that it sells to PC makers, had filed a complaint with regulators sometime after early November 2007, arguing that Microsoft should open the less-expensive versions of Vista to virtualization.

virtualization-vista-windows-microsoft.JPG

Although the report didn’t name the Phoenix virtualization product, it was referring to HyperSpace, technology that the company unveiled in November 2007. HyperSpace embeds a Linux-based hypervisor in the computer’s BIOS that allows the computer to run open-source software without booting Windows. A little more than two months after Phoenix filed its complaint, Microsoft gave in. “After discussion with the Plaintiff States and the three-person technical committee that assists in monitoring Microsoft’s compliance, Microsoft agreed to remove the EULA restrictions, and has done so,” the status report said.

Unfortunately, Phoenix Technologies and Microsoft declined to comment about the complaint and the changes to virtualization in Vista.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, complaint, court, EULA, HyperSpace, microsoft, MS, Phoenix, Phoenix HyperSpace, Phoenix Technologies, virtualisation, virtualization, Vista virtualization, windows, windows vista, Windows Vista virtualization

Looking Back At A Decade of Open Source Virtualization

March 10, 2008 by Kris Buytaert 3 Comments

Will 2008 become the “Virtual Year”?

That’s what some people would have us believe now that the virtualization hype is reaching never before seen heights, and large acquisitions & mergers are starting to become quite common (Citrix bought Xensource, Novell picked up PlateSpin, Sun acquired innotek, Quest Software snapped up Vizioncore while VMware treated itself to Thinstall, and so on).

But few people realize or fail to acknowledge that the large majority of virtualization techniques and developments were started as, or remain Open Source projects.

Where are we coming from ?

Even without looking back, we know that IBM was one of the pioneers in the virtualization area; they were talking about Virtual Machines before I was even born. But who remembers one of the first Open Source virtualization takeovers? Back in 1999, Mandrake Software bought Bochs . Yes, that’s nineteen ninety nine, even before the y2k hype. Kevin Lawton had been working on the Bochs project together with different other developers since 1994. In 1999, he also had started working on Plex86, also known as FreeMWare.

Kevin back then compared Plex86 to other tools such as VMWare, Wine, DOSEMU and Win4Lin. Plex86 in the meanwhile has been totally reinvented. While at first it was capable of running almost all operating systems, it is now a very light virtual machine designed only to run Linux.

Wine was also a frequently covered topic at different Linux Kongress venues. As its initiators claim themselves, Wine is not an emulator, but it most certainly used to be a key player in the virtualization area. Its attempts to run non-native applications in a different operating system, in this case mostly Windows applications on a Linux platform, didn’t exactly pass by unnoticed.

However, installing VMWare or Qemu became such an easier alternative than trying to run an application with Wine. And Win4Lin, its commercial brother, had similar adoption issues. Corporate adoption for neither Wine nor Win4Lin was successful, and Win4Lin recently reinvented itself as a Virtual Desktop Server product, where it is bound to face a lot of stiff competition.

People who claim desktop virtualization was ‘born in 2007’ obviously missed part of history. Although most Unix gurus claim desktop virtualization has been around for several decades via the X11 system, the Open Source alternatives to actually do the same on different platforms (or cross-platform) have also been around for a while.

Who has never heard of VNC, the most famous product that came out the Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory (ORL) in Cambridge, England? VNC was one of the first tools people began to use to remotely access Windows machines. System administrators who didn’t feel like running Windows applications on their Unix desktop just hid an old Windows desktop under their desk and connected to it using VNC. It was also quickly adopted by most desktop users as a tool to take over the desktop of a remote colleague. After the Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory closed different spin-offs of VNC such as RealVNC , TightVNC and UltraVNC popped up.. and it’s still a pretty actively used tool.

But VNC wasn’t the only contender in the field. Back in 2003, I ran into NX for the very first time , written by the Italian folks from NoMachine , with a FreeNX release co-existing alongside a commercial offering. It was first claimed to be yet another X reinvention, however NX slightly modified the concept and eliminated the annoying X roundtrips. The fact that NX used proxies on each side of the connection guaranteed that it could function even on extremely slow connections.

In the early days of this century, there was some confusion between UML and UMLinux. While Jeff Dike called his User-mode Linux the port of Linux to Linux, it was in essence a full blown Linux kernel running as a process on another Linux machine.

Apart from UML, there was UMLinux, also a User Mode Linux project, featuring a UML linux machine which booted using Lilo and from which an out-of-the-box Linux distribution could be installed. Two projects, one on each side of the Atlantic, with both a really similar goal and similar naming was simply asking for confusion. In 2003, the UMLinux folks decided to rebrand to FAUmachine. hence ending the confusion once and for all.

Research on virtualization wasn’t conducted exclusively in Germany; the Department of Computer Science and Engineering of the University of Washington was working on the lesser known Denali project. The focus of the Denali project is on lightweight protection domains; they are aiming at running 100s and 1000s VM’s concurrently on one single physical host.

And apparently, one project with a confusing name wasn’t enough. The Open Source community seemed desparate for more of that. Hence, the Linux-VServer project and Linux Virtual Server came around around the same time. The Linux Virtual Server actually hasn’t got that much to do with virtualization, at all. In essence, Linux Virtual Server is a load balancer that will balance TCP/IP connections to a bunch of other servers hence acting to the end user as one big High Performant and Highly Available Virtual Server. (The IPVS patch for Linux has been around since early 1999).

Linux VServer (released for the first time in late 2001) on the other hand provides us with different Virtual Private Servers that are running in different security contexts. Linux VServer will create different user space segments , so that each Virtual Private server looks like a real server and can only ‘see’ its own processes.

By then, Plex86 had a big competitor coming from France, where Fabrice Bellard was working Qemu. At first, Qemu was really a Machine Emulator. Much like Bochs (anyone still running AmigaOS?), you could create different virtual machines from totally different architectures. Evidently froml X86, but also from ARM, Sparc, PowerPC, Mips, m68k and even development versions for Alpha and alternative 64bit architectures. Qemu however was perceived by a lot of people as slow compared to other alternatives. There was an Accelerator module available providing an enormous performance boost, however that didn’t have such an open license as the rest of Qemu, which held back its adoption significantly. It was only about a year ago (early 2007) that the Accelerator module also became completely open source.

The importance of Qemu however should not be underestimated, as most of the current hot virtualization projects are borrowing Qemu knowledge or technology left and right. KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is the most prominent user of Qemu, but even VirtualBox, Xen (in HVM mode) and the earlier mentioned Win4Lin are using parts of Qemu.

As this is an overview of the recent Open Source Virtualisation history the focus has been on running virtual machines on Linux, or connecting to a remote platform from a Linux or Unix desktop, where most of the early developments have taken place. We shouldn’t fail to mention CoLinux in this regard, however. CoLinux allows you to run Linux as a Windows process, giving people on locked down desktops an alternative for VMWare to run Linux on their desktop.

Xen is with no doubt the most famous open source virtualization solution around, certainly after its acquisition by Citrix. Xen was conceived at the XenoServer project from the University of Cambridge, an initiative aiming to build an infrastructure for distributed computing and to create a place where one can safely execute potentially dangerous code in a distributed environment. Xen was first described in a paper presented at SOSP in 2003 but work on it began somewhere in 2001.

Next week, we’ll talk more about virtualization and open source with a detailed look at today’s landscape.

Filed Under: Featured, Guest Posts Tagged With: 64bit, Accelerator, acquisitions, Alpha, ARM, bochs, citrix, CoLinux, denali, DOSEMU, faumachine, FreeMWare, freenx, IBM, Jeff Dike, Kevin Lawton, kvm, linux, linux kernel, Linux Kongress, Linux Virtual Server, Linux-VServer, m68k, Mandrake, Mips, nomachine, nx, Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory, open source, ORL, OS, Plex86, PowerPC, qemu, RealVNC, SOSP, sparc, TightVNC, UltraVNC, UML, UMLinux, Unix, User Mode Linux, virtual desktop, virtual machines, Virtual Private Server, VirtualBox, virtualisation, virtualization, vnc, Win4Lin, windows, wine, X11, X86, Xen, xenoserver, xensource

Preinstalled Hypervisors And The Future of Operating Systems

March 5, 2008 by Kris Buytaert Leave a Comment

Jay Lyman from The 451 Group (also check out the interview we did with John Abbott, Chief Analyst & Research Director at The 451 Group) wonders about the future of Linux distributions in the virtualization arena.

Now that VMWare announced that it will embed its ESX 3i hypervisor in different server platforms from HP, Dell, Fujitsu-Siemens and IBM, the question pops up how Operating System Vendors will deal with this change of platform.

VMWare certainly isn’t the only one with those plans, since Ian Pratt from XenSource mentionned exactly the same during his Fosdem talk.

How do the OS vendors react to this new feature ? According to Lyman’s blog post, Red Hat claims

it is hardware vendors such as AMD and Intel that will create that standard virtualization layer and capability.

and

Novell indicates VMware may be taking somewhat of a risk, though, since OEMs like HP will look to upsell to their own software to create and manage VMs, which ESX 3i can’t do.

A hypervisor still needs management tools, so that the guest OS’s can be initiated, stopped and migrated. Applications aren’t running on hypervisors (yet); they need an operating system for IO, Memory Management and Network stacks at least for the foreseeable future.

On a longer term, we’ll have applications running natively on the hypervisor for sure. But today Operating System vendors are hoping for a uniform and better way to support different available and upcoming hypervisors and off course those lightweight systems will also benefit from these improvements.

If I were in the Operating System market I wouldn’t worry yet at this pointis , just as with all other features that hardware vendors are selling it is still ‘only’ a feature. When ordering a Dell you can choose between different CPU’s, different hard disks, different Operating Systems and most likely in the near future, different hypervisors as well.

Filed Under: Featured, Guest Posts, People Tagged With: 451 Group, amd, Dell, fosdem, Fujitsu-Siemens, HP, Hypervisor, Ian Pratt, IBM, jay lyman, John Abbott, Novell, operating systems, OS, red hat, The 451 Group, vmware, Xen, xensource

Analyst Says Virtualization May Have Impact on Desktops … In 2010

March 5, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Tim Luke, an analyst from investment bank Lehman Brothers, claims the impact of virtualization technology on desktops won’t be significantly felt until at least 2010 although he acknowledges its impact may already be limiting growth in the server market (then again, Gartner says it performed just fine in 2007).

As for the mainstream desktop market, Luke forecast the virtualization trend there may remain “subdued” in the near term. According to the analyst, the economic case for desktop virtualization is not as compelling and also cited user reluctance. Luke estimated about 1 % of desktops will be virtualized by 2010, and 4 % by 2012. However, Luke said that the virtualization of individual desktop applications “may see better traction in the medium term.”

[Source: CNN Money]

Filed Under: Featured, News, People Tagged With: desktop, desktop virtualisation, desktop virtualization, desktops, gartner, Lehman Brothers, server market, servers, Tim Luke, virtualisation, virtualization

VMWare To Embed VMware ESX 3i Hypervisor Across Dell, Fujitsu-Siemens, HP and IBM Servers

February 27, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

Today at VMWorld Europe 2008 (watch our video reports), VMware announced agreements to embed the VMware ESX 3i hypervisor in servers from Dell, Fujitsu Siemens Computers, HP and IBM. System providers are expected to begin shipping servers embedded with the VMware ESX 3i hypervisor within the next 60 days.

vmware1.jpg

From the release:

“We are very excited to be partnering with Dell, Fujitsu-Siemens, HP and IBM to proliferate virtualization and fast-track customers on the path to running a self-managing virtual datacenter,” said Diane Greene, president and chief executive officer of VMware. “Customers can now get VMware pre-integrated and pre-configured for the hardware platform of their choice for immediate standalone server consolidation. As customers want to expand their adoption and get more value from virtualization, they can upgrade from the ESX 3i hypervisor to VMware’s complete datacenter virtualization and management suite, VMware Infrastructure 3 (VI3).”

“VI3 provides automatic load balancing, business continuity, power management and the ability to move a virtual machine across physical machines with no service interruption. In addition, customers who are already using VI3 can plug-and-play virtualization-enabled servers into their datacenters to dynamically and automatically expand the pool of resources (CPU, memory, and networking) available to meet their changing business requirements.”

Greene and other VMware executives highlighted the new VMware ESX 3i agreements with representatives from Dell, HP and IBM during today’s VMworld Europe general session keynote presentations. The presentations will be available via a recorded web cast (http://www.vmware.com/go/europe-webcast ) by 3:00 p.m. Central European Time and 9:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time today.

Filed Under: Featured, News, Partnerships Tagged With: Dell, Fujitsu-Siemens, hardware, HP, IBM, server, servers, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VMware ESX, VMware ESX 3i, VMware ESX 3i Hypervisor, VMWare ESX Server

Novell Picks Up PlateSpin For $ 205 Million in Cash

February 25, 2008 by Robin Wauters 3 Comments

Today, Novell announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire PlateSpin for $205 million using current cash. The acquisition is expected to close during Novell’s second fiscal quarter 2008 subject to the satisfaction of closing conditions.

PlateSpin will be integrated into Novell’s Systems and Resource Management business unit. As part of this business unit, PlateSpin will continue to develop and market its solutions to a global customer base. This will be done through the continued operation of PlateSpin’s Toronto facility as well as through a combination of PlateSpin and Novell offices and facilities around the globe.

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All key PlateSpin management are staying through FY08 and many have accepted permanent employment at Novell. PlateSpin founder and CEO, Stephen Pollack, will take on the duties of VP, Business Development for the SRM business unit.

From the official release:

“The combination of Novell’s platform and automation management with PlateSpin’s leading solutions for workload relocation, protection and provisioning will give customers the agility to cross physical and virtual boundaries so IT can work together. Both organizations are focused on helping customers maximize the strategic value of the heterogeneous data center. Novell and PlateSpin will deliver products for complete workload lifecycle management and optimization for Linux, UNIX, and Windows operating systems in the physical and virtual data center.”

[Source: CNN Money]

Filed Under: Acquisitions, Featured, News Tagged With: acquisition, Novell, PlateSpin, SRM business unit, Stephen Pollack, virtualisation, virtualization

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