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VMware Patches Security Vulnerabilities In Multiple Product Lines

June 1, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Several critical security vulnerabilities have been addressed in the newest releases of VMware’s hosted product line. Relevant releases include VMware Workstation 6.0.3, VMware Player 2.0.3, VMware ACE 2.0.3, VMware Fusion 1.1.1 and earlier versions of the before-mentioned products.

Users of VMware hosted products VMware Workstation 5.x, VMware Player 1.x, and VMware ACE 1.x should note that although they are not vulnerable to these issues, they will reach their end of general support on 2008-11-09. Customers should plan to upgrade to the latest version of their respective products.

Some of the security issues:

  • VMware HGFS File System Heap Overflow
  • Windows based VMCI arbitrary code execution vulnerability

A full update on the VMware Security Advisories (VMSAs) can be found here.

[Source: VMBlog]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: security, Security Advisories, security issues, security vulnerabilities, virtualisation, virtualization, VMSA, VMSAs, vmware, VMware ACE, VMware ACE 2.0.3, VMWare Fusion, VMware Fusion 1.1.1, VMware Player, VMware Player 2.0.3, VMware Security Advisories, VMWare Workstation, VMware Workstation 6.0.3

Xen Updates Trademark Policy Update

June 1, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

As you most probably know, Citrix has updated its Xen Trademark Policy last week “for the benefit of all those in the Xen community who distribute and contribute to the open source project”, in order to restrict unauthorized usage of the term ‘Xen’ in company and/or product names going forward. We think the policy makes all the sense in the world, but not everyone agrees with us on that.

Anyway, the company yesterday released a Word document carrying the final wording of the policy. You can download it here. Note that the FIT (Faithful Implementation Test) discussed in the document is still being worked on by the Xen Advisory Board.

Update: the PDF version has also been put up.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: citrix, trademark, trademark policy, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, Xen Trademark Policy, xen.org, XenApp, xenserver, xensource

A Closer Look At VMware Financials

May 29, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

Zachary Scheidt over at Seeking Alpha penned an excellent analysis of the current financial situation VMware is in. Scheidt correctly notes the corrent virtual monopoly the virtualization industry’s poster child holds, and dissects the company’s latest earnings releases.

A small excerpt:

In addition to the $438 million in revenue, the company announced an increase of $88 million in its deferred revenue which is essentially revenue the company has received for service not yet performed. The total is now $641 million which should help to stabilize future revenue as the company can draw on this balance during future periods. In fact, a Credit Suisse analyst had an interesting theory stating that this quarter was helped significantly by the company drawing on this deferred revenue base instead of new business actually driving the strong revenue number.

Read the whole article.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: analysis, earnings, financials, Seeking Alpha, stock market, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, Zachary Scheidt

Sun xVM VirtualBox Downloads Pass The Five Million Mark

May 29, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Sun Microsystems today announced that Sun xVM VirtualBox, the free and open source desktop virtualization software it acquired by taking over its maker innotek earlier this year, has surpassed five million downloads in just 18 months.

Sun xVM VirtualBox

The press release touts the xVM VirtualBox 1.6 software to be the first free hypervisor to support all major host operating systems (OS), including Mac OS X, Linux, Windows, Solaris and OpenSolaris. Sun unveiled xVM VirtualBox 1.6 earlier this month. Currently downloaded more than 10,000 times a day, the new version includes more than 2,000 enhancements and full support for Mac OS X, Solaris and OpenSolaris host operating systems. It also features newly added support for high performance virtual devices, improved scalability and Web services for remote administration.

xVM VirtualBox software is a key component of Sun’s xVM virtualization and management software portfolio, which includes Sun xVM Ops Center, Sun xVM Server, expected for release in the Summer of 2008, and the Sun Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) Software.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: desktop virtualization, free, Hypervisor, innotek, sun, sun microsystems, Sun VirtualBox, Sun xVM, Sun xVM VirtualBox, Sun xVM VirtualBox 1.6, VirtualBox, virtualisation, virtualization, XVM, xVM VirtualBox, xVM VirtualBox 1.6

VMworld Europe 2009, Feb 24-26 in Cannes, Opens Pre-registration

May 29, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Richard Garsthagen, Senior Evangelist for VMware in EMEA (see the interview we did with him at the last VMworld Europe), has announced in a blog post that VMworld Europe 2009 will again be held in Palais de Festivals in Cannes (the same pace of where the film festival is) from Feb 24 till 26.

The pre-registration page has already been opened up, in case you’re interested in enrolling quickly and getting regular updates about upcoming announcements.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: conference, richard garsthagen, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VMWorld, VMworld 2009, VMWorld Europe, VMworld Europe 2009

“Benchmarking” The Citrix / XenServer Combo with Ian Pratt (Video Interview – Part 2)

May 28, 2008 by Toon Vanagt 3 Comments

During the Fosdem 2008 conference, we had a chance to sit down (on a bench) with Xen Guru Ian Pratt. Below is the second part (watch the first part here) of our exclusive interview, where Ian shines his light on the Xen GPL license, OracleVM, xVM (Sun), the future of virtualization and XenServer.

We cut the interview into 4 digestable pieces, which we publish one at a time. As said, this is the second part (you can also find a written transcript below for your convenience):

This video is also available on Vimeo and Streamocracy.

(0:02) Could Virtualization also help the infrastructure to become more self-healing or self-provisioning?

“Sure. It is already the case that you can have a pool of physical hardware. Something that Xen calls a resource pool and than a pool of VMs running on top. You can configure things as the referrer to give “down notices”, so you can fail over those virtual machines. There are plenty of people who do that today on Xen.”

(0:31) When I look at the Xen GPL-license. I find it interesting that Xen is being renamed as xVM by Sun, OracleVM by Oracle. When Oracle first announced OracleVM it quickly had to admit it was actually a tweaked Xen version. I heard they initially did not publish the tweaked code.

“Oh no, they have. The fact is that there are lots of different vendors, shipping Xen products as they pick up the Xen hypervisor core engine and incorporate it into their own products. The Linux vendors: like Novell and Redhat, there is Sun, there is obviously XenSource / Citrix and Virtual Iron. Lots of different companies are doing that. Actually the GPL license means that any changes they make will go back into the main project. In reality, pretty much all those company just pick it up as is. They take the latest stable release, which is maintained, they might add the odd little patch to it, but it really is all very clear, there is a lot of uniformity in the Xen versions out there.”

(1:40) As many of these projects like Sun’s xVM and Oracle’s VM are using the Xen project. At what level are they tweaking their own software to be more integrated with Xen or to be more stable or faster?

“Most of those companies are very close to mainline Xen. They post a couple of patches. In some cases they maybe not. What they will be doing, is taking Xen and it’s really on top of Xen , in the rest of their Virtualization stack (that runs in user space) that’s where they’ll be probably doing their own things. They might have their own management tool. They will have their own way of wanting to present virtualization to the user. So if you think about what the operating system vendors are typically doing, is they want to expose virtualization using the same tools and user interfaces as they use for exposing other facilities inside that operating system. Which is quite different from what a company like XenSource was trying to do, which tried and effectively build a virtual machine hosting appliance. You just put the CD in the server, install it and just manage it from a windows GUI or web interface. Every company is bringing Xen to market in a different way for a different kind of user. And that is where the differentiation happens. The core engine is the same throughout.”

(03:31) You think that is what the future will bring us? You buy a piece of hardware and just initiate it, to install an operating system.

“I think it will go way further than that. We have always envisioned getting Xen embedded in the firmware as we think that the hypervisor is a core part of the platform. We think it should come with servers when they role of the production line and they should all have Xen installed on them. And the really cool thing is that this is happening. Dell is already announcing that in their new servers shipping later this year, Xen will be a factory installed option in flash memory. Other hardware vendors are to follow soon. People will have ubiquitous virtualization, every server will have Xen installed on it. You will be able to install multiple operating systems and virtual appliances, etc. on top of the hardware.”

(04:33) So now the x86-type of servers are becoming very similar to what mainframes are used to for decades?

“Exactly, it will be a similar model. The difference will be that you can start using these x86-servers, connecting them into resource pools and than running pools of VMs on top of these pools of servers. That is when things start becoming really interesting.”

(04:58 ) You think people will need to rethink their whole infrastructure even more drastically than they do today?

“Yes, today virtualization is typically used for sort of server consolidation. Often used for taking legacy applications or old versions of operating systems and consolidating them onto a single machine…
I think that the way that things are going to be tomorrow and start happening today (and for which Xen is brilliantly prepared) is actually for running production workloads, where all of your machines and partners are running hypervisors and that enables you to run any virtual machine image on any physical machine to take advantage of being able to move workloads around by using live relocation. Also balancing of VMs to servers and even features like fault tolerance and the stuff we talked about, which you want for production workloads.”

(05:59) If you ask people to name a virtualization vendor, VMware will probably come up first. They definitely have a track record to have built this market. But if you look at really big IT-datacenter applications like Amazon, Google or MySpace, they actually deployed Xen as their core engine. It appears all of the Fortune top 100 companies in the United States are VMware clients. So why do banks go for VMware and these major datacenters for Xen?

“I think you will see plenty of banks switching to Xen and plenty of them already have, as it is obviously a lot cheaper to deploy Xen. The reason that companies such as Amazon go with Xen, is that when you do these large virtualization deployments, you want to be using something to secure great performance and some of the high-end second-generation virtualization features. Xen certainly has all that and also has the advantage that it is open source. So there is not going to be vendor lock-in, with a number of different Xen-vendors to procure from and the price is right. For a sophisticated company like Amazon, they will just download the open source version and they will have 20 engineers deploying it across machines. There are plenty of other companies that will rather tank one of the pre-packaged versions from one of the Xen-vendors. I think that many of the large virtualization deployments -such as Amazon- are on Xen because it works better.”

Go back to part 1 of this interview

Filed Under: Featured, Interviews, People, Videos Tagged With: citrix, Citrix Ian Pratt, citrix xenserver, Ian Pratt, interview, Sun xVM, University of Cambridge, video, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, Xen Ian Pratt, xen.org, XenDesktop, xenserver, xensource, XVM

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