• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Virtualization.com

Virtualization.com

News and insights from the vibrant world of virtualization and cloud computing

  • News
  • Featured
  • Partnerships
  • People
  • Acquisitions
  • Guest Posts
  • Interviews
  • Videos
  • Funding

vmware

The Current State of Open Source Virtualization

March 26, 2008 by Kris Buytaert 6 Comments

We’ve started by looking back at a decade of Open Source virtualization, and in this second part of the series we’ll tackle today’s landscape (last updated in March 2008).

The least you can say about the current state of Open Source virtualization is that the field is extremely diverse: different approaches in the virtualization area are all represented, with paravirtualization, OS virtualization and hardware-assisted virtualization in various colors and flavours.

Let’s start with paravirtualization:

Xenmaster Ian Pratt released the 1.0 version of Xen somewhere in September 2003, it wasn’t till the Xen 2.0 release (around December 2005) that Xen adoption really started to accelerate. Ian announced the 2.0 release in November 2004 with support for both Linux 2.4, 2.6, FreeBSD and Live Migration support.

Xen pioneered Paravirtualization, giving it both a giant performance boost but also an argument for the naysayers who claimed it was impossible to run Windows on the platform. The fact that the Cambridge lab had access to the Windows source code and even had it running on Xen wasn’t really an argument since they were unable to redistribute it.

Different Linux distributions adopted quickly making Xen the de facto Linux virtualization solution. Also: the Open Solaris project was working on Xen support, first only as a guest but later also as a host operating system.

Then came the VT capabilities, and once again Xen was leading the pack, bringing out a Xen version that supported hardware-assisted virtualization. So the Open Source Xen version was beating the competition on different levels – speed, flexibility, etc. – but had one key element missing: the management layer, a GUI, the part that people actually spend money on …

Meanwhile, the company XenSource Inc. had been founded by the original developers of Xen and they started to work on a set of management tools and bang, next thing we know is Citrix announcing the acquisition of XenSource for $ 500 million USD in the summer of 2007.

While the discussion between Xen and VMware was still going on to see what infrastructure was needed in the kernel to support virtualization, KVM (Kernel Based Virtual Machine) had come out of nowhere: a lightweight kernel module that enabled the VT Capabilities of the new generation of CPUs and that ended up in the mainstream kernel in no time. KVM was ultimately included in the 2.6.20 release of the Linux kernel after merely a couple of months of development.

KVM enabled Qemu to benefit from the VT features and a new team was born. KVM is the lean and mean, small virtual machine, and the fact that it was so small only made it easier to adopt in the main tree. KVM is maintained by Avi Kivity who is working at Qumranet, with Moshe Bar amongst its founders about to launch a product called Solid ICE, aiming for the desktop virtualization market. KVM however is not doing all the work, a modified Qemu version acts as the user space part that enables the full power of KVM.

Today different distributions support both KVM and Xen and are working towards a single tool set to manage them both.

Qemu started to pop up everywhere in the virtualization arena in 2007, e.g. within the VirtualBox project from innotek, a German software company located in Stuttgart.

VirtualBox is one of the most important open source solutions if you want to run other operating systems on your desktop. It’s free, it’s open and it has all the features you would expect from its commercial counterparts! Sometimes these commercial counterparts, facilitate ‘match making’ events, which outcomes are not intended. For example at VMworld in New York in September ’07, Achim Hasenmueller, co-founder and kernel wizard at innotek was introduced to the Sun Microsystems management and less than four months later they announced their ‘marriage’ (Sun acquired innotek for an undisclosed amount in February 2007). As VirtualBox was already running on a multitude of Operating Systems such as Windows, Linux and OS/X, they evidently also added Sun’s Solaris to this impressive list. VirtualBox also supports a large number of guest platforms, including common Windows flavors (NT 4.0, 2000, XP, Server 2003, Vista).

We’ve been talking mostly about paravirtualisation and hardware-assisted virtualization with KVM, Xen and VirtualBox, but of course there is much more out there. Let’s have a look at the players on the Operating System Level virtualisation are, an identical copy of one kernel providing a secured container where user space programs can run. Today, there are 2 main players in this area (VServer and OpenVZ). VServer was started by Jacques Gelinas and is currently lead by Herbert Pötzl from Austria. The Linux-VServer started July 2001 as BSD Jail reimplementation for Linux. In 2004, it was rewritten from scratch for the 2.6 kernel.

Not much of a surprise, people tend to think that Linux-VServer and OpenVZ have a lot in common, and some people even think OpenVZ was once based on a fork of Linux-VServer. According to Herbert Pötzl that isn’t true today: the projects do not share any code, although they provide roughly similar functionality in often quite different ways … In 2003 however , Linux-VServer was forked into FreeVPS by Alex Lyashkov and soon after that, it was integrated into the H-Sphere product, maintained by Positive Software.

SWsoft was founded back in 1999 and released their commercial Virtuozzo product in 2001, as a proprietary virtualization solution for Linux and later also supporting Windows. When SWsoft acquired Plesk in 2003, a proprietary framework to manage hosted solution, evidently virtualization fitted nicely in this picture since the OS level virtualization OpenVZ uses is a perfect match for web hosting.

SWsoft then went on to buy Parallels and managed to keep it a secret for almost 3 years. In late 2007, they finally decided that their Parallels brand was better known than their Virtuozzo or Plesk brands and decided to change the company name into Parallels alltogether. Having a single kernel for each virtual machine that runs in your environment is both the advantage and the disadvantage of OpenVZ and Linux-VServer. Its advantage of being a lightweight solution that can scale easily to hundreds of machines with no significant penalty is also its biggest disadvantage – what if something goes wrong with that kernel? Other approaches such as Xen and KVM allow you to run different kernels , or even different operating systems, which of course requires much more memory for each instance.

If you are into Hot Motorcycles you’ll remember the 1999 Virtual Iron company, a company that manufactered a CD that helped people create a customized bike. Fast forward to 2004, where a domain-squatter was using the site, and in February 2005 a company that looks like the Virtual Iron company we know now, started using the domain. Virtual Iron had a product called Virtual Iron VFE in store, which they presented at Linux World and later also more in depth at OLS. They claimed to have developed a Virtual Machine Monitor that was also Clustered. The Virtual Iron VFe product transparently created a shared memory multi-processor out of number of servers.

Yes, this sounds familiar, it sounds like an SSI implementation, it sounds like openMosix or OpenSSI, and that’s exactly what some people thought it was. Rumors on the net claimed that Virtual Iron was indeed violating the GPL while reusing and modifying openMosix code while not redistributing it’s changes, true or false, we’ll probably never know. In August 2005 Virtual Iron started shifting as they announced they were working on having their software manage other platforms too. Today, their product is based on an open-source Hypervisor, which name you can most likely already guess (yes, indeed, they use Xen). What happened with the SSI alike technology is unclear.

The final player in this area we need to point to is Paul Rusty Russel’s Lguest, formerly known as Lhype, almost known as Rustyvisor or Wonkavisor. It is an experimental Hypervisor developed by Rusty intended as proof of concept for the paravirt ops. Redhat has been working on it also, but who knows what the future will bring?

Which brings us to the final part: where to put your money? That kinda depends on your needs:

  • If I’m talking to a hoster who needs to run lots and lots of similar machines with easy management, I’ll be pointing him to Linux-Vserver
  • If someone is looking at bare metal hardware virtualisation for his Linux machines, it’s Xen all the way
  • If he needs a platform to test different distributions and operating systems on his desktop I’ll probably be pointing to VirtualBox
  • If someone really wants to head into placing his desktops virtualized in the data center, KVM would be my bet

What if someone wants to do nothing else but use Linux as a base framework to run Windows virtual machines?

In that case the commercial Xen offerings such as the one from XenSource, Suse and Redhat would be best as they can provide you also with adapted drivers for the guest operating system. But ask me again in 6 months and I’ll probably tell you otherwise.

Watch out for the third part of this article series, with more on Xen!

Filed Under: Featured, Guest Posts, News Tagged With: citrix, Ian Pratt, kvm, Linux-VServer, open source virtualization, openvz, Parallels, qemu, qumranet, sun microsystems, swsoft, Virtual Iron, VirtualBox, virtualisation, virtualization, Virtuozzo, vmware, VServer, Xen, xensource

Marathon Technologies Releases Virtualization Tool, Attempts To Simplify Disaster Recovery With everRun VM

March 25, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

Marathon Technologies made a splash at the fall 2007 VMworld show with a preview of its everRun VM product for high availability and disaster recovery and will formally announce the product today; it’s available in beta and is expected to ship in April, according to the company.

virtualization-marathon-technologies.jpg

Based on the same everRun automated availability software employed by over 1,800 organizations, everRun VM prevents outages and data loss in Citrix XenServer virtual infrastructures. The significance of this new software for the IT industry is threefold:

  1. Companies can now reliably run production applications in virtual machines, gaining the benefits of virtualization across a much broader range of applications
  2. It will now be practical to make high availability and DR a standard part of the IT infrastructure for midsize and larger companies
  3. A key component is in place to accelerate the next wave of server virtualization adoption

With virtualization moving beyond test and dev environments and into the realm of key business applications, more CIOs are looking for high availability (HA) solutions now. If those apps are running in a VM, the last thing IT would want is a slowdown or outage for business users. The higher profile the app, the greater the need for a high availability solution for VMs.

Marathon is betting that its product will appeal in particular to midmarket CIOs, some of whom have had a hard time justifying the cost of traditional high availability/disaster recovery solutions, many of which require the added expense of a storage area network (SAN) and staffers with specialized SAN skills. Marathon’s product can use direct connect attached storage, which is a plus for CIOs who don’t have a SAN and don’t want to pay to install and maintain one.

Marathon’s product works only with the Citrix/Xen virtualized server architecture, not marketshare-leader VMware‘s. Microsoft Hyper-V support is planned at a later date, but no VMware support is on the drawing board, according to Marathon (which cites its ability to get its product to market faster and ensure proper performance with the Citrix/Xen architecture, among the reasons for this decision.).

By the fourth quarter of this year, Marathon is expected to ship everRun VM Lockstep Option, providing system-level fault tolerance, designed for scenarios where you lose a whole server for any reason, for example, if you lose a building in a fire. This will essentially be an add-on solution to everRun VM, the company says. Customers will be able to set the desired level of protection VM by VM, to keep costs down for VMs that don’t need the highest level of protection.

Also check out the interview our occasional guest blogger Tarry Singh did with Marathon’s CTO Jerry Melnick, where he reveals more information about the pricing strategy.

“everRun VM is available in two flavors. For companies that already have XenServer Enterprise, they can buy everRun VM for $2,000 per physical server. If they don’t have a hypervisor installed, they can buy an integrated bundle from us that includes XenServer Enterprise Edition and everRun VM for $4,500 per physical server. That’s for a perpetual license by the way. We’ve briefed a lot of channel partners and potential customers on the product and the pricing and more than once we’ve had them respond, “what’s the catch.” There is no catch. We’re just trying to make this so easy and inexpensive that companies don’t have to think to hard about adding it to XenServer.“

[Source: The Register UK]

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: beta, citrix, Citrix Xen, citrix xenserver, disaster recovery, everRun, everRun VM, everRun VM Lockstep Edition, high availability, Jerald Melnick, Jerry Melnick, Marathon, Marathon Technologies, Microsoft Hyper-V, SAN, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Dell and VMware Looking For Sustainable Growth in South Asia

March 25, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

South Asia is a booming market, and with the US seemingly tumbling into a deep, long-term recession, it’s no surprise to see a lot of companies aiming for growth in both market share & revenue in the Far East.

 virtualization-vmware-logo.jpg

VMware is investing $ 100 million by 2010 to expand its Bangalore, India-based research and development (R&D) operations, as announced today by VMware president and CEO Diane Greene at a news conference in Bangalore. VMware already has a strong presence across India with offices in Bangalore, Pune, Chennai, Delhi, and Mumbai.

VMware plans a brand new, state-of-the-art 82,000 square foot development center in Bangalore (including a 4,000 square foot computer lab) and aims to double its India-based engineering organization to more than 1,000 people in the next two years.

virtualization-dell-logo.jpg

Meanwhile, Dell is also readying itself for a decline in sales from the US, historically its most prolific revenue base. Since its Chinese consumer sales last year were up 54 %, three times the industry average, Dell plants to cultivate this new audience and feed the retail stores. Dell India plans to launch low-cost desktop and notebook computers that are customized for India in the second week of April.

“Today we are a $700 million business in India,” Dell India Vice President and General Manager Rajan Anandan said at a news conference. He added the company will soon announce plans to establish retail operations in the country. In India, Dell follows its traditional model of selling computers over the Internet or by telephone. “At present, we are not into retail operations in India, but that’s going to change,” Mr. Anandan said.

Dell has two factories in China and a design center in Shanghai and it’s planning on increasing the amount of components it buys in China by 27 % this year to $ 23 billion. The company is also reportedly planning on increasing the number of laptop models it produces by 50 %.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Bangalore, China, Dell India, Diane Greene, India, R&D, Rajan Anandan, South Asia, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Live Virtual Machine Migration Vulnerability

March 24, 2008 by Kris Buytaert Leave a Comment

Anthony Liguori has a good summary of the Blackhat paper by Jon Oberheide, Evan Cooke and Farnam Jahanian of the University of Michigan about Xensploit .

Black Hat Logo

The idea of Xensploit is to use a Man in the Middle attack between 2 hosts performing a Live migration. The fundamental flaw is that by default Live migration of virtual machines is unencrypted or often even unauthenticated. Of course good network security practice isolates this kind of traffic in it’s own VLAN, but it shows that security is becoming a bigger issue day by day.

The vulnerability seems to be present with VMWare and Xen versions prior to 3.1 but according to Anthony not with KVM.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Anthony Liguory, Blackhat, Evan Cooke, Farnam Jahanian, kvm, live migration, on Oberheide, vmware, vulnerability, Xen, xensploit

Arrow ECS Launches V-PWR Program To Help NetApp Resellers Sell Virtualization

March 17, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

The Enterprise Computing Solutions (ECS) business of Arrow Electronics today launched “V-PWR”, a program to help its  North American NetApp reseller partners capitalize on increasing demand for virtualization.

virtualization-arrow-arrowecs-netapp.jpg

From the press release:

Through the V-PWR program, Arrow ECS provides education, training and tools to help NetApp partners pursue and close sales for virtualization solutions with their customers. Partners receive educational sales materials about virtualization challenges and solutions; onsite sales and technical training; personalized sales coaching; and marketing support, among other program services.

In addition, partners gain certification to resell virtualization software that complement NetApp(R) environments, such as VMware, distributed through Arrow subsidiary Alternative Technology Inc. NetApp virtualization accreditation is also available for partners that are seeking to increase profits by offering storage virtualization solutions.

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: Arrow, Arrow ECS, Arrow Electronics, Enterprise Computing Solutions, NetApp, V-PWR, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VPWR

Microsoft To CIOs: “Virtualization Is Too Expensive”

March 17, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

At the European CIO summit, Barbara Gordon, Microsoft’s EMEA VP for Enterprise Sales stated that Microsoft sees price as a differentiator in the virtualization market.

“What I hear is that users need to take out cost from their environments and virtualization is the credible approach. You have to ask if virtualization today is delivering cost effective value? And that it justifies the costs that are being charged?” She added, “Price is a differentiator. Existing players are quite expensive. Microsoft can add value to this market with a server play and an application play.”

Asked if the Microsoft Hyper V would have different versions that would offer different levels of functionality similar to those offered by VMware Gordon would not be drawn, according to Australian PC World.

“The time of individual point products is lessening. Our approach will be take a look at the environment, and make sure that the right virtualization functionality fits that environment. The fact is that it is the technologies that work well together and have good functionality that will let the user spend time adding value. So we’ve got a very broad offering.”

Martin Niemer, Senior Product Marketing Manager at VMware (yes, also the one that said Dell would soon start shipping servers with VMware ESX Server 3i included free of charge, said:

“We’re not seeing any signs that customers don’t understand all of the issues associated to moving to virtualization. They understand that what it comes down to is that even the hyper visor is zero cost, which Hyper V won’t be, the question is how many virtual machines can you run on a server. If you can’t run that many you still have to run it on two servers and that doubles your cost. That’s really going to be the decision point. It depends on what users want. If you want basic partitioning you can buy a server with a Vmware ESX 3i integrated hyper visor or buy a foundation version of ESX. And if you want additional functionality such as high availability you can buy a slightly more expensive licence.”

Niemer said he didn’t foresee Vmware being forced to adjust its pricing when Hyper V came to market.

We’ll see.

Filed Under: News, People Tagged With: Barbara Gordon, European CIO summit, Hyper-V, Martin Niemer, microsoft, MS, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VMWare ESX Server, VMware ESX Server 3i

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 58
  • Go to page 59
  • Go to page 60
  • Go to page 61
  • Go to page 62
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 69
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Tags

acquisition application virtualization Cisco citrix Citrix Systems citrix xenserver cloud computing Dell desktop virtualization EMC financing Funding Hewlett Packard HP Hyper-V IBM industry moves intel interview kvm linux microsoft Microsoft Hyper-V Novell oracle Parallels red hat research server virtualization sun sun microsystems VDI video virtual desktop Virtual Iron virtualisation virtualization vmware VMware ESX VMWorld VMWorld 2008 VMWorld Europe 2008 Xen xenserver xensource

Recent Comments

  • C program on Red Hat Launches Virtual Storage Appliance For Amazon Web Services
  • Hamzaoui on $500 Million For XenSource, Where Did All The Money Go?
  • vijay kumar on NComputing Debuts X350
  • Samar on VMware / SpringSource Acquires GemStone Systems
  • Meo on Cisco, Citrix Join Forces To Deliver Rich Media-Enabled Virtual Desktops

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Sample on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • Newsletter
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • About