Red Hat: Virtualization will be free
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Red Hat is making a kernel-based hypervisor using KVM, developed by its new acquisition, Qumranet. This will provide better performance and power management on new hardware optimized for virtualization, Paul Cormier, Red Hat's president of products and technologies, said on Wednesday.
However, Red Hat will continue to support the Xen hypervisor bundled in its Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (RHEL 5) operating system until at least 2013, both as part of RHEL 5 support and because it provides legacy support for virtualization on older, x86-based hardware.
"KVM is clean, and is accepted in the upstream Linux community," Cormier said at a Red Hat press event in London. "All Linux distributions will work on this virtualization technology. It's not a bolt-on or graft-underneath technology."
"At the same time, Xen was the right decision and still is the right decision," Cormier added. "We are the number-one contributor to the Xen project, and it is very much part of RHEL 5." Xen and VMware were produced earlier and had to run on Intel x86 hardware, which was not optimized for virtualization, he explained, saying: "VMware and Xen have to do a lot of work, and that has an impact on performance."
For this reason, today's implementations of virtualization--used on an estimated 10 percent of servers--are largely for test and development, he said. Most users find they cannot be optimized well enough, for performance or power conservation, to move onto large-scale production servers.
Virtualization is predicted to move onto 90 percent of servers in the next five years, but, to do so, it will have to take more control of the hardware--hence the need for KVM, which is in the kernel and can use the extended instruction sets that Intel and AMD are providing for virtualization in their newer processors.
"Xen was pioneered virtualization on old hardware, but KVM was designed around new hardware," explained Red Hat's chief technology officer, Brian Stevens, at the same meeting. Having both hypervisors will not cause problems for users, since Red Hat has developed an API layer called Libvirt, which has been widely adopted.
Red Hat claims to be unconcerned about Microsoft's recent virtualization push, saying that Microsoft has offered its Hyper-V product virtually for free purely to attack the commercial VMware product. "Microsoft has its eyes on VMware," said Cormier.
Cormier pointed out that virtualization is already included for free in RHEL 5. "We didn't uplift the price of RHEL when we added it," he said, saying that the open-source model is well suited to virtualized servers.
Talkback Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)
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I thought it already was. They call it WINE. (nt)
nt = no text
CobraA111th Sep 2008 -
WINE is not virtualization.
WINE is neither para-virtualization of full virtualization, it is a Windows API layer that runs on LINUX/BSD/similar systems. Further, WINE is just a way to run Windows binaries, vitualization allows you to run any OS as a guest/virtualized system without direct access to you hardware (thus virtualized). What Redhat is talking about is kernel level virtualization (similar to running VMWare ESX, but without the management GUI... ESX also runs on RHEL).
B.O.F.H.11th Sep 2008 -
Dude, ... stop playing WoW before you hurt yourself.
Vitualization is a VM (virtual machine), in which you can install an OS (Windows, GNU/Linux, BSD, etc).
(win4lin, vmware, vitualpc, virgualbox, etc)
WINE runs Win32 software in a POSIX environment, without the need for a fully structured VM.
startx.jeff11th Sep 2008
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