VMware simplifies VirtualCenter and ESX Server evaluation

VMware just changed the way to obtain an ESX Virtual Infrastructure Node (VIN) evaluation. An ESX VIN is composed by a single ESX Server, the VirtualCenter server and the VirtualCenter agent for ESX.

Till today obtaining an evaluation copy of both product was quite complex, interacting with VMware Sales folks or the worldwide distributors and waiting for a manual activation of your account.
Now this procedure is much simplified thanks to an online webform, automating the account activation for both products download.

Request your VirtualCenter and ESX Server evaluation copy here: http://www.vmware.com/programs/7/ESXVinEval.do

Update: the evaluation form finally provides access to ESX Server 2.5.2 and VirtualCenter 1.3.0

Slides: Developing and Testing with Virtual PC

Ben Armstrong, Program Manager on the Virtual Machine team at Microsoft and author of the Virtual PC Guy blog, presented a session at Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2005 titled Developing and Testing with Virtual PC.

You can download the slides at this location: http://216.55.183.63/pdc2005/slides/TLNL07_Armstrong.ppt
No other speeches about virtualization were presented at PDC05.

Free Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 e-Learning with TechNet Plus

Quoting from Fabrice Meillon blog (french language):

Access FREE Virtual Server 2005 e-learning with TechNet Plus (US, Canada, and EMEA only)

With TechNet Plus, you’ll receive 90-days of free access to Microsoft E-Learning with hands-on learning to help you build your Virtual Server skills and knowledge. The following course is available to TechNet Plus subscribers from October 1 to December 31, 2005:

Course 2288: Using Microsoft® Virtual Server 2005

Note: Microsoft E-Learning courses are available in English only. Availability of learning resources may vary depending on your geographic location and subscription level

Microsoft silently released Automated Deployment Service 1.1

Microsoft released yesterday Automated Deployment Service (ADS) 1.1. It now includes Virtual Server Migration Toolkit (VSMT) and the package is in fact called ADS_VSMT_1.1.exe

The unique change related to Virtual Server 2005 is the resolution the resolution of the support article 875533:
Virtual Server 2005 virtual machines cannot contact the Automated Deployment Services controller during the Pre-Boot Execution Environment startup process

The VSMT included in in ADS 1.1 seems unchanged.

VMware ESX Server 2.5.2 released, VirtualCenter 1.3 expected soon

VMware sent out a new minor release of its flagship product: ESX Server.
What’s new:

  • Support for new servers from HP, IBM, and Dell, including servers using AMD dual-core Opteron processors such as the HP ProLiant DL585.
  • ESX Server 2.5.2 supports new storage arrays, guest operating systems, backup software, and management software.
  • If you are managing ESX Server with VMware VirtualCenter, you must use VirtualCenter 1.3, available soon.

Look at the resolved issues here: http://www.vmware.com/pdf/esx2x_fixed_bugs_list.pdf

VirtualCenter 1.3, anticipated by VMware, will implement dual-core licensing support for management of ESX Server 2.5.2 and GSX Server 3.2 hosts.

Microsoft details Virtual Server upgrades

Quoting from uk.builder.com:

Microsoft on Wednesday detailed changes to its Virtual Server plans, announcing it will shift its next update of the software from a maintenance release to a paid upgrade.

The software maker, which had earlier announced plans to issue a service pack for Virtual Server 2005, said it will instead release a product in the fourth quarter of this year known as Virtual Server 2005 R2. Microsoft said the new version, already in beta, will offer improvements to performance and availability.

“There are a number of new features in the product we’re introducing that make this much more full featured and robust… than a service pack,” Microsoft group program manager Mark Kieffer said in a presentation at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco.

Virtualisation software such as Microsoft’s Virtual Server, EMC’s VMware and XenSource’s Xen lets a server simultaneously run multiple operating systems. Advocates argue that virtualisation lets companies reduce the number of servers they need by letting jobs run more efficiency on a smaller number of machines.

Next year, Microsoft will issue another, larger update to the Virtual Server product, the company said. A beta version of that update is planned for the first half of the year and a final release slated for the second half of 2006.

In a keynote address earlier on Wednesday, Intel general manager Pat Gelsinger demonstrated an early version of that next-generation Virtual Server release, which he called Virtual Server 2006, saying the software will support Intel’s virtualisation technology, simply called VT — a chip feature that makes virtualisation simpler and faster. Microsoft said the software also will support AMD’s equivalent to VT, called Pacifica.

Microsoft said that new version of the software will also offer strengthened isolation so the corruption of one virtual machine will not affect other virtual machines on the same system.

The Virtual Server 2006 release, though, will act as a bridge as Microsoft works to shift the work of virtualisation into the Windows platform itself, using a technology known as a hypervisor. Kieffer said that Microsoft is aiming to have that technology be a part of the server version of Longhorn, which is scheduled for release in 2007, though, unlike the client version, it has not yet been officially named.

Microsoft also is adding support for Linux, following through on a pledge chief executive Steve Ballmer made in April. Linux and other non-Windows operating systems already work with Virtual Server, but Microsoft has not offered support for any problems that customers might encounter with other operating systems.

Kieffer said Linux support would probably come by the end of this year.

“We’re probably talking about Red Hat and Novell,” Kieffer said, adding that the company is still deciding which specific distributions will be supported.

Microsoft shipped the first version of Virtual Server last year, following several delays. The company obtained the technology as part of its February 2003 acquisition of assets from Connectix.

Kieffer also listed several future Windows server virtualisation features. Among them:

  • An individual virtual machine will be able to run powerful multiprocessor work loads — likely as many as eight processors for a single machine.
  • Users will be able to move virtual machines as they run from one computer to another “with no visible downtime.”
  • Users will be able to store a virtual machine’s state on a hard drive, letting a user stop and restart a virtual machine or take “snapshots” of a machine at a particular time.
  • Microsoft will support both 32-bit and 64-bit virtual machines, though a 64-bit operating system will be required to host the system.
  • Microsoft will compensate for different memory access speeds that are increasingly common in mainstream servers. This computer design principle is called nonuniform memory access, or NUMA, and Kieffer said it’s a complicating factor with multicore processors.

VMware P2V Assistant reaches beta 2

The public beta program about P2V Assistant reached its next beta phase.
The new and refreshed features:

  • Added support for booting the P2V Boot CD from USB CD-ROM devices (including HP iLO remote lights-out access virtual CD-ROM devices).
  • Updated P2V Boot CD Hardware Compatibility list for new machines supported in 2.1. (See updated HCL link on website).
  • Fixed issue where SCSI disk model names did not always match between the Boot CD and P2V Assistant application.
  • Fixed Boot CD not recognizing Adaptec ServeRaid 6i card (ips driver).
  • Fixed warning about evdev.ko input driver when booting on Dell 1850.
  • Added information to README about “sudo” program used to run ethtool as root (ethtool fails if run as a non-root user).

You can grab P2V Assistant beta 2 here: http://www.vmware.com/programs/6/p2vBeta.do
Remember this beta will expire on 11/15/2005. After that date we can expect the RTM.

Microsoft Virtual PC Express will be included in Windows Vista Enteprise

Steven Bink reports: Microsoft announced a new Virtual PC Express edition that will be included in the upcoming Windows Vista Enterprise edition.
This Windows edition will be available for Microsoft Software Assurance customers. Others should wait early 2006 when Virtual PC Express will be released as a stand alone product.

The announcement was made during this webcast.

OT: virtualization.info bookshelf section added

Hi everybody.
The virtualization market is really growing huge and also books about virtualization technology and products are poppin’around as mushrooms. Soon it could become complex tracing every book about the argument so a new section is now added on top of my blog sidebar: the Virtualization Bookshelf.

It will list books about virtualization released on the market, ordered by blog post date (so it will probably be a release date order too).
Every link will point to my blog post about the book and inside the post you’ll find a shortcut to the Amazon page of the book. Everytime a published book will be republished I’ll update the bookshelf order.

I hope you’ll find this new section useful.