Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 will not be a part of MSDN

Microsoft decided to not make available VS 2005 for MSDN subscribers. Anyway the company arranged a special promotion:

The VS and MSDN teams have collaborated to create a special offer for Virtual Server 2005 Standard and Enterprise Editions which are being made available only to MSDN Universal and MSDN Enterprise
subscribers between October 1, 2004 and March 31, 2005. This is a special promotional offer.

MSDN Universal and Enterprise level subscribers are being granted special access to Virtual Server 2005 Standard and Enterprise Editions as downloads from MSDN Subscriber Downloads only. Virtual Server 2005 Standard and Enterprise Editions will not be made available by fulfillment or in the monthly subscription shipments.

This is the full retail, production version of the product and does not include the typical MSDN restrictions of running only in dev/test environments and can be run in production (except on XP Pro).

This makes sense: VMware doesn’t give away GSX Server to MCTs, so why Microsoft shouldn’t do the same with Virtual Server? Hey! wait a moment: Microsoft make available any kind of products on MSDN… why not Virtual Server…?

Microsoft Virtual PC 7.0 released under pressure, lacks planned features

Quoting from AppleInsider:


Amidst pressure from several avenues, Microsoft was forced to cut features from its new Windows emulation software in order to deliver G5 compatibility without further delays.

Many of the feature enhancements originally planned for Virtual PC 7.0 did not make it into the version of software that will begin shipping this month, multiple sources tell AppleInsider.

According to reports, the emerging presence of Apple’s G5 processor played a major role in Microsoft’s decision to trim a significant number of features from the emulation software late in its development cycle. As a result, sources said that the software may not run as fast as some users may have come to expect.

– Native Graphics Card Support

While Apple began introducing G5-based computers in June of last year, a G5 compatible version of Virtual PC had yet to ship a year later. It was about this time that Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft began feeling pressure from Apple to get the product out the door, sources said. With current and potential G5 customers miffed over a lack of Virtual PC support, and an imminent release of the iMac G5 around the corner, Microsoft began to trim around the fat.

One of the key features to hit the chopping block was native graphics card support. Although Virtual PC 7.0 does deliver faster, cleaner graphics, users will find that the software still emulates the S3 Virge chipset from the late 90s, with no 3D acceleration. Sources said that native graphics support remains under development, but is unlikely to surface for many months.

– Expanded RAM and emulated RAM Disk

Several additional features have also been delayed until future revisions of software, such as an increase in the software’s PC memory from 512MB to 4GB and a new option to use Virtual PC’s virtual PC hard drive as a RAM disk for faster virtual disk performance.

– Multiprocessor Support Refinements

Microsoft has also decided to hold off on some refinements to Virtual PC’s multiprocessing support, which will eventually allow audio emulation, networking, IDE I/O, and USB functions to be offloaded from the primary processor.

Virtual PC 7.0 was released to manufacturing late last month and should begin arriving on retail store shelves in October. The release will deliver support for G5-based Apple computers, better graphics handling, expanded preferences, and an improved user experience.

Future versions of Virtual PC are expected to reacquire most, if not all of the features cut from the development of Virtual PC 7.0. Unfortunately, sources were unable to provide target release dates, stating only that some features may not mature until next summer.

Veritas first to deliver wide area disaster recovery capabilities for Microsoft Virtual Server 2005

Quoting from ComputerWorld:

VERITAS Software Corporation today announced that VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows software is the first to deliver the combination of enhanced high availability and wide area disaster recovery capabilities to Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 customers. VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows integrates VERITAS Volume Manager, and VERITAS Cluster Server the industry?s leading1 independent heterogeneous clustering and availability software, to help ensure continuous availability of mission-critical applications and data.

With the utility computing model in mind, customers can now deploy Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 to consolidate physical servers across their IT environments. To help ensure that no single point of failure for multiple virtual machines is introduced, VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows software is designed to monitor the state of a virtual machine and respond to failures in the most logical manner, translating into high availability and minimal downtime for customers. With VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows, new standby virtual servers are not required; therefore high availability is achieved without the need to invest in additional equipment.

?VERITAS continues to demonstrate its commitment to Windows customers by delivering high availability and disaster recovery software for any operating system hosted by Microsoft Virtual Server 2005,? said David Hamilton, director of the Windows and Enterprise Management Division at Microsoft Corp. ?We believe VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows can help customers do more with less by building manageability into their applications.?

Integral to the company?s strategy to enable utility computing, while protecting the data and underlying applications, VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows software allows Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 customers to leverage existing technology and maximize server utilization across their IT infrastructures. With a utility model of computing, data and applications are always available and VERITAS Cluster Server and VERITAS Volume Manager help provide this capability by protecting the end-user and eliminating single points of failure for consolidated virtual servers. VERITAS Cluster Server also protects against planned and unplanned downtime by providing automatic or manual failover of virtual machines between physical hosts ? another contributing factor to keeping Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 highly available.

“VERITAS continues to embrace and extend the power of the Windows Server System by offering customers an integrated, interoperable high availability solution for Microsoft Virtual Server 2005,? said Bob Maness, senior director of product marketing, VERITAS Software. ?With the additional support of Microsoft Virtual Server 2005, VERITAS Storage Foundation HA for Windows software adds to our on-going efforts to help organizations protect and manage their applications and data regardless of the platform or operating system they choose.”

A Pioneer in Clustering and High Availability For nearly a decade, VERITAS has been an innovation engine developing and delivering high availability software to customers. Clustering has evolved in that time in three key phases. The first phase offered rudimentary two node failover solutions intended to remove single points of failure between storage, servers and applications physically connected via SCSI interfaces. This offered little peace of mind to customers looking to ensure the availability of their applications and data in the event of a physical disaster at their primary site. The second phase advanced the concept of high availability by connecting multiple nodes of clustered servers to SANS offering comparable application performance to end-users and bringing true disaster recovery to the enterprise. The current and most exciting phase of clustering ties together multiple nodes of storage, servers and applications through a clustered file system and a clustered volume manager moving customers rapidly toward an automated infrastructure and utility computing.

Tool: Nagios plug-in for VMware ESX Server

Kevin Hilscher just wrote “check_vmfs”, a Perl plug-in for Nagios.
Similar to the check_disk plug-in, check_vmfs monitors the free space available on vmfs volumes and will return warning or critical messages to nagios based on user-defined thresholds (ie: warn at 10%, critical at 5%). The check_vmfs plug-in must be executed remotely using the check_by_ssh plug-in because check_vmfs uses the VMware “vdf” command behind the scenes, and the vdf command must be executed as a root user.

You can download it here.

VMware sets up regional HQ in Singapore

Quoting from IT AsiaOne:

Fast-growing enterprise software firm VMware has moved into Singapore with a bang, making the Republic its regional headquarters responsible for the Asia South and greater China region and appointing Koh Eng Kheng as regional director.

Commenting on VMware’s expansion into Singapore, Jim Lenox, director of VMware Asia Pacific said: ‘VMware sees Singapore as a major area of opportunity for revenue growth as well as serving as a springboard to the region.’

Mr Koh added that Singapore provides a promising market opportunity for VMware solution adoption and also serves as a springboard for it into Asean, India and the greater China region due to its excellent infrastructure and proliferation of local talent.

‘In terms of regional growth, India and Greater China pose tremendous opportunities – India is particularly strong in software development, business process outsourcing and customer support centres, while China is enjoying high server shipment rates,’ he said.

Transitive unveils virtualization tech

Quoting from eWeek:

On Monday, Transitive Corp. formally unwrapped its “hardware virtualization” technology, which allows software written for one processor to run on another platform.

The technology will be adopted and deployed by an undisclosed computer OEM in the fourth quarter, company executives said, and five more manufacturers are expected to announce support for the technology next year.

Transitive’s new QuickTransit technology is reminiscent of Transmeta Corp.’s “code-morphing” technology, which can translate and recompile code written for an x86 processor, for example, onto its own internal microarchitecture. The techniques that Transitive have developed, however, could allow an application written for the AIX operating system on IBM’s Power architecture to run alongside an application written for Sun’s Solaris OS on an UltraSPARC processor?all on top of an Itanium chip produced by Intel Corp.

Los Gatos, Calif.-based Transitive is pitching the technology as one that can bring applications written on legacy hardware, such as IRS software that was written in the 1970s, onto up-to-date platforms, according to Bob Wiederhold, the company’s CEO and president.

“All of them are orphaned on very old hardware,” he said.

The QuickTransit technology uses a core kernel, with a modular back end that plugs into the target hardware. Likewise, a series of modular front ends provide a limited number of architectures that the technology can virtualize, with more on the way.

For now, the company is offering four target modules?that is, the physical processors the technology will run on: Itanium, Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s Opteron, the Pentium 4 x86 architecture and the PowerPC.

The QuickTransit technology can virtualize any mainframe operating system on all four processor architecture back ends, according to the company. In addition, the Itanium, Opteron and x86 back ends will virtualize the MIPS architecture. Both the Opteron and x86 products will also allow a virtualized Power or PowerPC architecture to run on top of them; likewise, a PowerPC chip can also run an x86-designed operating system, such as Windows, on top of it.

Company executives said the technology could be used to run Apple Computer Inc.’s Mac OS on top of an x86 processor. However, the technology will most likely not be sold to individual users, so a company such as Hewlett-Packard Co. would have to decide to license the technology and include it with their PCs.

On average, translating the various instructions will require about an 80 percent computational performance hit, said Frank Weidel, lead solutions engineer at Transitive. The QuickTransit kernel also requires a memory penalty of about 25 percent per application, Weidel said. The amount of memory an application uses for data is not affected. However, the multiple instances of the technology will run side by side; for example, the company has been unable to break the QuickTransit application running 200 instances of the technology alongside one another, he said.

QuickTransit has been tested on 64-bit applications, as well as for compatibility between 32-bit applications written on a 64-bit architecture, Weidel said.

The technology maintains compatibility by translating blocks of instructions into an intermediate representation, then optimizing the code. If the software discovers loops of frequently used code, that code is stored in the cache. According to Weidel, the technology can handle operating-system and graphics calls to specific registers through a “call mapper” that intercepts and passes on the request to the target hardware to maintain compatibility.

According to Weidel, the technology can handle calls and functions written to specific technologies not included in the target hardware, such as SS2 instructions specifically encoded in the latest Intel Pentiums that are not included in the PowerPC.

Release: VMware ESX Server 2.1.2 released!

VMware just released a minor update for its masterpiece. Here what’s new:

– Expanded Support for Dell Servers
ESX Server 2.1.2 includes support for the following Dell servers:
Dell PowerEdge 1850
Dell PowerEdge 2850

– Support for Blade Servers
ESX Server 2.1.2 includes support for the Intel® Server Compute Blade SBX44 server.

– Support for Dell PercRAID Controllers
ESX Server 2.1.2 includes support for the following RAID controllers:
PERC 4/SI
PERC 4/DI

– Expanded Support for Opteron-based Systems
ESX Server version 2.1.2 includes support for the following Opteron-based systems:
IBM eServer 325
HP ProLiant DL585

ESX Server 2.1.2 includes OpenSSL version 0.9.6b, and is not affected by the security vulnerabilities reported by the CERT® Coordination Center.

Microsoft targets virtualization with cheaper offering

Quoting from ComputerWorld:

VMware may have gotten a three-year head start on Microsoft with its server virtualization software. But Microsoft is aiming to make a splash based on price.
“We really want to be the most cost-effective solution where people are using virtual machines on Windows Server 2003,” said Eric Berg, a group product manager in Microsoft’s Windows and enterprise management division.

Berg said Microsoft evaluates customers’ needs based on workloads, focusing on three areas: software testing and development, legacy application rehosting and targeted production workloads, such as Active Directory domain controllers, networking and departmental applications.

“We have a lot of tools that will help them,” he said. “Virtual Server is just one tool.”

Berg said Microsoft has a Component Object Model application programming interface that can be used to create scripts to automatically deploy new server builds and “great integration” with its server management tools, so customers don’t have to buy a specific tool to manage both virtual machines and physical servers.

Tom Bittman, an analyst at Gartner Inc., predicted that VMware will keep 80% market share for the consolidation of servers to run production-ready applications. But he added that Gartner expects Virtual Server to command at least 50% of the market for test and development workloads by the end of 2005.

“The price differential is going to kill [VMware] unless they change it,” Bittman said.

Michael Mullany, vice president of marketing at VMware, which was acquired earlier this year by EMC Corp., said only that the company “always listens” to customers on pricing.

Dan Kusnetzky, an analyst at Framingham, Mass.-based IDC, said the underpinnings of what Microsoft is doing are different than what VMware is doing. He said Microsoft is using its Virtual Server technology to help customers running older stacks of applications on Windows NT 4 migrate to new hardware rather than continue to run them on separate machines.

Kusnetzky said VMware’s focus is to help users move to a highly virtualized environment “so they can tune what they do to their business needs” and assign IT resources as needed.