In an interview with the Australian ITNews website, Dennis Rose, VP of Citrix Pacific, touted desktop virtualization as the next big thing alongside server virtualization. Short of news, the interview did have an interesting ending. Apparently, AVP for Citrix ANZ Rob Willis hinted at Citrix XenDesktop – iPhone compatibility when the most hyped phone in history hits the Australian market in a couple of months, during his keynote of the Citrix Application Conference.
virtualisation
Verari Systems Joins Forces With Xsigo To Deliver Integrated Compute and I/O Density Solution
Verari Systems, a developer of blade-based computing and storage solutions and Xsigo today announced a high-density blade solution that offers virtualized network and storage connectivity. Available immediately and sold through Verari Systems, the new solution integrates Verari’s BladeRack 2 X-Series computing platform with Xsigo’s VP780 I/O Director.
The companies claims the integrated solutions increases up to ten times the I/O connections per blade as compared to other solutions available in the market today.
“Blade systems are an ideal complement for server virtualization,” said Mark Bowker, analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group. “When you add dynamic virtual I/O to this mix, it takes the value of the entire back-end to a whole new level, compounding all the benefits each derives independently. This kind of packaged functionality is exactly what is required to make the ‘virtual data center’ a reality. When you boil it down, these are root capabilities to make everything from Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) to ‘utility’ computing to ‘greening up’ the data center legitimate and not just marketing hype.”
According to the press release, the Verari and Xsigo solution supports green IT by increasing compute density, enabling complete lights-out management, and allowing users to run more virtual machines per blade. Server I/O infrastructure may be reduced by 70 percent, while overall data center efficiency is increased by 100 percent.
“The increasing demand for Web 2.0 applications in the enterprise is driving unstructured data at more than 100 percent growth,” said Dan Gatti, senior vice president of Marketing, Verari Systems. “These applications require more storage and I/O connections, and as IT managers virtualize more servers, system performance is stressed. By working together, Verari and Xsigo are providing the best solution available on the market to address the requirement of high density computing and I/O and redefine the standard in enterprise computing.”
“Benchmarking” The Citrix / XenServer Combo with Ian Pratt (Video Interview – Part 1)
Some time ago, we had a chance to sit down (on a bench) together with Xen Guru Ian Pratt, well known for co-founding and ultimately selling XenSource – the company behind the open-source Xen project – to Citrix in October 2007.
This exclusive interview was taken as part of our video coverage at the Fosdem 2008 conference held at the ULB (Brussels Free University, hence the “inspiring” Solbosch campus background). Toon Vanagt, owner and publisher of Virtualization.com, interviewed the rather jet-lagged Ian Pratt on a sunny Sunday morning about Xen, XenServer and the virtualization landscape as a whole.
We cut the interview into digestable pieces which we will publish one at a time. Here’s the first part, the second part can be found here (you can also find a written transcript below for your convenience):
This video is also available on Vimeo and Streamocracy.
Hello Ian Pratt, you are one of the founders of XenSource, which was recently renamed to XenServer after it was acquired by Citrix. Could you give an introduction to para-virtualization, hypervisors or OS-enlightment as Microsoft likes to market it?
“The work on Xen really started in the University of Cambridge back in 2001 as we were interested in figuring out the best way to build virtualization systems. We realized there were two techniques which -when used together- were going to enable you to do a great job at virtualization.
One is getting facilities into the hardware to make the job of virtualizing the platform easier. This means getting stuff into the CPU, chipset and in particular into the I/O-devices, like the NICs and hostbus adapters. But second also working with the operating system vendors to try to get stuff into the operating system to enable the OS to call down into the hypervisor to work better in a virtualized scenario.
We pushed hard on both of those fronts, working to design network interface adapters that had this special hardware support and also working to add these extensions into operating systems like Linux and then other free operating systems and now even an OS like Microsoft Windows. That is how we get to this current generation of virtualization software that really is able to achieve great performance and have great security to provide all the great benefits of virtualization.”
(1:48) Ian, it is quite remarkable that the Xen project is one of the rare open source software projects that actually managed to get its feature requests into the large hardware vendor production. How did you achieve this?
“Well, there is a long lead time on getting anything build into hardware. As Xen had been running for a quite while as a university project, we were talking to all the different hardware vendors. You have to remember in the early days Xen was sponsored by some of those vendors and also working with the operating system vendors. Also we did things like build network interfaces that had these facilities in.
We prototyped them and wrote papers about them. And then companies really began to see that virtualization was important. Let’s be fair: VMware had a great part to play in showing the world that virtualization was important and then I think Xen has done a great job at showing people how to it should really be done.”
(2:47) It is interesting you mention VMware, because Xen is an open source project and VMware remains a closed source product to date. One of the major challenges for people looking at which vendor to select, is the specific Virtual Machine format and how to avoid vendor lock-in. So what is your opinion on the Open Virtual Format (OVF) and how do you see the evolution in this field.
“OVF actually came about as a collaboration between us and VMWare. We had been working on a format we called the Open Virtual Appliance (OVA) and had been putting quite a bit of work in to that. We were obviously really concerned about the interoperability issues. We had a discussion with VMware as they had been working on their next-generation format for their hypervisor and we actually collaborated together and came up with the OVF specifications. And now both sides are implementing that. We will have to see how it works out in practice. You still have to do a certain amount of preparation on the virtual machine to make it able to work on both platforms and it is really down to the people who produce virtual appliances to follow the best practices and make sure their Virtual Machines are portable. But at least now there is a common file format and metadata format for transferring things between different virtualization solutions. Or at least there will be in the future when it is implemented and ratified by the DTMF and al that boring stuff is out of the way.”
(4:20) So you think that once these meta-data have been defined for Virtual Machines and have adopted by Xen, VMware and Microsoft, we will actually be able to do Vmotion or Virtual Machine Relocation between those different vendors?
“Doing live virtual machine relocation is kind of like changing the engine on a plane in flight!
That is certainly further down the road. OVF is really about having a format in which you can package a given virtual appliance, which might actually consist of the multiple virtual machines and install it onto a given hypervisor and have it run there. And hopefully you also will also be able to use it for moving an installed virtual machine between different hypervisors, but there is a way to go, before we can do this live relocation. It is a worthy end goal, but there is a lot of stuff that would need to happen to make that work.”
(5:16) It is one of those things, when you see it happen for real; which now creates a strong WOW-effect in Virtualization.
“It certainly is and it would be nice to be able to live relocate a virtual machine from Xen to Hyper-V or to VMware, but there is a lot of work to do.”
(5:34) Will VM-mirroring ever be possible?
“Absolutely will not only be possible, it has existed for some time. There is some great work that has been done and a couple of things to point out here. One, there is a commercial product available on top of XenServer, which does this today by a company called Marathon Technologies, where they have 2 virtual machines running on different physical hardware on top of Xen and they are synchronizing the state between the two in real-time to the extent that you can just walk up to one of these machines and yank the power cord straight out from their back. None of the users of these applications or services provided on that server will even notice anything has happened, because it instantaneously (or within milliseconds) failed over to the other VM.
So that was the commercial product. There is also a lot of great work going on in open source. For example a project at the University of Michigan, using a technique called deterministic replay. That is very cool. Also work done by the University of British Colombia on a project called Remus, which I think is really cool, because it works for Virtual Machines that are multi-processor, so you can have an SNMP guest and you could be synchronizing that VM-image to another machine. It is looking like they do not even necessarily need to be in the same building. You might be able to synchronize over a suitably fat pipe across the wide area network. You can use it for disaster recovery. We want to get this cool stuff into mainline Xen.”
(7:16) When looking at VM-relocation, the typical reasons people use this for is either to avoid downtime, disaster recovery and high availability, to relocate workloads or to enforce security policies: either with fire walls inside the VM or to lock the OS at the root-level. Can you tell us something more on those security policies you can enforce in Xen?
“One of the nice things you can do with Virtualization is that you can actually stand outside the OS and look into it. And implement some of these facilities which you would normally do using software installed within the VM. You can now actually do it outside and you do not have to worry whether the administrator has actually configured the fire wall, virus scanner or back-up correctly within the VM. Because we can actually do all of these tasks from outside now. I think that is going to be a far more common thing in the future, where you will try to take care of all of those things within the virtualization layer, so that your administrator of the VM does not have to worry about or risks to mess it up. You can kind of protect administrators from themselves.
You will see virus scanners running as part of the virtualization stack or platform and these will scan the contents of all of the VMs running on it. It is like taking the firewall that you might have on the edge of the network, where it connects to the outside world and kind of pulling that in, to put it closer to the VMs that are actually running applications and actually implementing that firewall in a distributed fashion across all of your virtualized platforms.”
Watch the second part of the interview here.
Fujitsu Siemens Now Shipping PRIMERGY BladeFrame With VMware Infrastructure 3
Fujitsu Siemens Computers recently announced it will be shipping PRIMERGY BladeFrame (powered by Egenera) combined with VMware Infrastructure 3.
Here’s how the company explains the move:
“The virtualization boom has revolutionized data centers, accelerating the shift from fixed, unresponsive, locked-down server resources to dynamic data centers of the future, where server resources are allocated according to demand and are reconfigured on-the-fly to guarantee that they always provide the best-possible levels of availability.
Introducing the market leading data center software virtualization platform to the highly-versatile PRIMERGY BladeFrame line means that Fujitsu Siemens Computers and VMware are delivering the industry’s ultimate platform for data center virtualization, bar none.”
[Source: MySolutionInfo]
Microsoft Publishes Guide for Testing Hyper-V and Failover Clustering
Microsoft has published a new 18-pages guide to setup virtual machines fail-over between two Hyper-V (now in Release Candidate 1) virtualization hosts. The step-by-step guide shows you “how to make a virtual machine highly availableby creating a simple two-node cluster and a virtual machine, and then failing over the virtual machine from one node to the other”.
You can download the 216 kb file here.
[Source: Techlog]
Native Support for Virtual Hard Disks To Be Added To Windows 7?
A team at Microsoft is hiring developers to work on adding native support in Windows 7 for Virtual Hard Disks (VHD) – Microsoft’s semi-proprietary specification for single-file virtual machine hard disks, reports the istartedsomething blog.
The job posting reads:
Do you want to join the team that is bringing virtualization into the mainstream? In Windows 7, our team will be responsible for creating, mounting, performing I/O on, and dismounting VHDs (virtual hard disks) natively. Imagine being able to mount a VHD on any Windows machine, do some offline servicing and then boot from that same VHD. Or perhaps, taking an existing VHD you currently use within Virtual Server and boost performance by booting natively from it.
Do you want to have the opportunity to work on a great Core OS team at the heart of Windows? If you have big ideas and want to implement them, if you love writing code, if you love delving into operating system internals, if you want to work on high visibility projects with direct consumer and customer impact and still work in a very technical environment, then you will feel right at home in this team.
Virtualization technology has been a great success with Virtual Server and Hyper-V. With native OS support on the horizon it will become an even greater hit. Our team is making this a reality in Windows 7. Consider the simplicity of backup using a VHD, or the portability of a virtual disk backed by a single file. These are a few reasons why this technology is poised to be one of the greatest features in Windows 7–come help us achieve this goal.
Now, the question is, will Microsoft allow booting from virtual hard disks?
Please comment with your opinion!