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Xen

Oracle Dumps Virtual Iron

August 17, 2009 by Kris Buytaert Leave a Comment

When early march this year we talked about Oracle eying Virtual Iron we noted that Oracle needed to fill the VM Management gap that RedHat was leaving on Xen level by moving to KVM.

Turns out that that indeed was their main target, late last month Oracle announced their key virtualization strategy to their old Virtual Iron customers,
Oracle is clear that they want too provide a Xen based next generation Virtualization architecture has zero license cost and zero key management.

They will be providing official application certification , they were already providing their customers with different OracleVM templates which gave them different Oracle based Appliances and earlier this month they announced they will be providing the community with their own Open Source Virtual Appliance builder, based on yet another JeOS, (Just Enough OS) platform, this time one based on Oracle Linux.

But more importantly was their message to the old Virtual Iron customers, Virtual Iron Products sales has been stopped, software download availability will be discontinued , also replacement media won’t be available anymore. there won’t be any more upgrades , support for the different Virtual Iron products will end in February 2010 at last (that’s for the last 4.5.16 release)

Oracle is giving the old Virtual Iron Customers 3 options ..

– When they continue to run Virtual Iron’s existing platform they will get support from Oracle they then can migrate at their own pace with migration tools provided by Oracle, Oracle realizes there will be some effort involved but they will do their best to make it easier.

– Another option is to already start running OracleVM today side by side with Virtual Iron, that way users can gain experience with the platform quickly. Oracle will be providing V2V conversion tools that can convert VHD virtual disks to Oracle VM disk images.

– And the third option is to move to OracleVM today, at no additional license cost, customers only need to pay for OracleVM

Looking at the time Oracle still wants to support the Virtual Iron platform to us that translates to .. you have 12 months to migrate, better do it fast. off course there’s already plenty of VM management frameworks that support Xen around , so Virtual Iron customers can choose to migrate to another platform if they want to.

Filed Under: Acquisitions, Guest Posts Tagged With: oracle, Virtual Iron, Xen

RHEL 5.4 will feature KVM

July 6, 2009 by Kris Buytaert 2 Comments

July 1st marked the availability of the first Beta version of what will eventually become Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.4 (RHEL) , for Virtualization.com readers the most important part of this upcoming release is with no doubt the full shift from Xen to KVM. When late last year RedHat picked up Qumranet it was clear that they weren’t going to gamble on 2 horses (Xen and KVM) and that for RedHat KVM was their platform of choice

Where initially KVM was considered for a lot of people as the Desktop Virtualization platform of the future , RedHat is now placing it in the center of their Enterprise Linux distribution.

But they aren’t ready yet .. when RedHat travels around the globe demoing it’s Virtualization platform it got from Qumranet is often critized for not having fully opened the code yet and and that their management platform still requires people to use a windows only management interface (much like Xensource had with one 3.X release) But with RedHat’s promise to open source Qumranet’s code that is probably only a matter of time.

The bigger question however is that of the migration from Xen to KVM. Different people have already build their toolchain, methods and procedures around working with Xen, some of them have based it on LibVirt, others on the Xen tools themselves, they are really happy about the Xen framework but they are really happy about a RHEL based platform also. Given it’s long term commitments RedHat has to provide Xen for a long time to come.

CentOS and Unbreakable, being Rebuilds of RHEL will have automatically KVM support included , but Oracle already showed the world it is aiming it’s arrows at Xen.

So how does the RedHat userbase feel about this .. are they going to follow RedHat to KVM or are they going to stay with their trusted and familiar Xen platform ?

Filed Under: Guest Posts Tagged With: kvm, RedHat, RHEL, Xen

Pingbacks Not Suited For Dirty Minds: XenItalia.com

July 2, 2009 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

It’s always nice to get pingbacks on our blog posts, but sometimes they can be confusing, especially to people with a dirty mind. Case in point: Virtualization.com publisher Toon Vanagt saw a trackback on our post featuring a video interview with Amazon’s Werner Vogels, coming from a new blog dubbed Xen Italia, and read something else in the URL (Xenitalia.com), namely Genitalia.com. We’re sorry, but the latter domain name has already been registered too.

To celebrate Toon’s dirty thoughts on the subject, we would like to give one of our readers a free book on Xen (in English). All you need to do is comment on this post with the funniest baseline for Xenitalia.com you could possibly think of.

Good luck!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: dirty mind, dirty minds, genitalia, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, xen italia

Xen 3.4.1 Hits Release Candidate Stage

June 29, 2009 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

From the Xen blog:

“Fifth release candidate is tagged as 3.4.1-rc5 in the usual place. Please test!”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: release, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, xen 3.4.1, xen 3.4.1 release candidate

Release: Karesansui 1.0

May 29, 2009 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

The Karesansui project has released version 1.0 of its open source virtualization management application.

While version 1.0 only supports the Xen hypervisor, the developers plan to support KVM and other virtualization systems in the future.  Administrators can install a virtual guest OS, boot VMs, shutdown VMs, and reach the virtual console directly through a Web browser interface.

The application is licensed under the GPL and LGPL and uses open source components such as: Python, libvirt, webpy, flup, lighttpd, psycopg2, tightvncviewer, jquery, jquery.form.  The web interface also has a RESTful architecture allowing for other applications to interact with it over HTTP.

Karesansui is available to download and you can also find an installation tutorial as well.  If you are looking for screenshots, you can find them here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: karensansui 1.0, karesansui, karesansui project, kvm, open source, open source virtualization management, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization management, Xen

Xen 3.4 Released

May 19, 2009 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Xen.org is pleased to announce the latest release of the Xen hypervisor (3.4), which is is referring to as “the open source industry standard for virtualization”.

From the blog post:

“As part of the Xen community’s commitment to continuous improvement, the new hypervisor offers significant enhancements in the following areas:

•    Xen Client Initiative (XCI) Enhancements –Xen.org continues develop industry virtualization standards for desktop and client devices. Xen 3.4 contains the initial XCI code release providing a base client hypervisor for the community to extend and improve. This new version of the Xen hypervisor expands the hardware options for the leading open source virtualization platform.

•    Reliability – Availability – Serviceability (RAS) – In addition, Xen now delivers a collection of features designed to avoid and detect system failures, provide maximum uptime by isolating system faults, and provide system failure notices to administrators to properly service the hardware/software. The combination of these services provide for a robust Xen hypervisor with fault-tolerant and back-up capabilities built-in.

•    Power Management – Xen 3.4 improves the power saving features with a host of new algorithms to better manage the processor including schedulers and timers optimized for peak power savings.”

On average, Xen.org receives more than 750 new code submissions to the source tree each month from developers across the world working on an array of solutions within the hypervisor.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: open source, open source virtualization, release, virtualisation, virtualization, xci, Xen, xen 3.4, xen client, xen client initiative, xen.org

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