Exclusive: free VMware Server details leaked

An anonymous virtualization.info reader reported a Google cached page linking a VMware France page for the highly expected VMware Server.

I removed his link for problems with my blog template but took a screenshoot of Google cache:


As you can see this free product will be launched in beta and is planned to be released in Q2 2006.
It will based on actual GSX Server technology and will also feature:

  • Virtual SMP support (note that there is no experimental adjective)
  • Intel Virtual Technology (VT) experimental support
  • 64bit support (I imagine both hostOS and guestOS)

VMware Server will gradually replace GSX Server which will disappear (even from Support) within 2 years.

With this move VMware does three strategic moves in one:

  • reaffirms itself once again as the first virtualization technologies provider, spreading virtualization culture everywhere and gaining as much loyal customers and enthusiasts fans as possible before Microsoft launches Windows Hypervisor
  • revamps interest in its less sold product, GSX Server (actually snub for ESX Server)
  • indirectly increases ESX Server selling opportunities (since there will be a discounted price for GSX customers asking to migrate)

Thanks to my anonymous reader!

Using the VMware COM API from .NET

Geert Baeke published a useful explaination of how to write Microsoft .NET applications working with VMware ESX and GSX Server COM APIs:

When you start writing your own programs to interact with GSX or ESX server, you might want to do so from a .NET application. In this article, I will show you how to do just that. It is quite simple.

In this example, I will build a simple application that illustrates how to perform the basic tasks. The application just retrieves a list of registered virtual machines and displays them in a listbox. When you double click the virtual machine, some details about that virtual machine are shown.

The sample was developed with Visual C# 2005 Express Edition…

Read the whole article at source.

Thanks to VMTN Blog for the news.

EMC Corporation to launch EMC World 2006

EMC Corporation is preparing the EMC World conference on 24-27th April in Boston.

The event is mainly focused on storage but this year I can see several VMware sessions:

  • Storage Best Practices with VMware ESX Server 2.x
  • Using VMware for Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery
  • Using VMware for Server Consolidation
  • Trends in Virtualization
  • VMotion with CLARiiON Storage (Hands-on Workshop)
  • VMware and Storage: Planning and Deploying with Fibre Channel, iSCSI and NAS
  • VMware ESX with CLARiiON – Best Practices
  • VMware Integration with Symmetrix
  • VMware Remote Disaster Restart using CLARiiON Replication Software
  • VMware’s ESX Server Architectural Overview

Read the whole agenda here.

EMC is also preparing a Momentum 2006 conference edition in Rome, Italy. I’m unlucky the event is not related to virtualization as well.

Breaking news: VMware to give virtualization server for free

An email circulating in these hours reports GSX Server is going to change name in VMware Server, distributed for free from 6th February.

The new product should appear on this page (now forbidden) for description and on this page (now redirected to VMware home page) for download.

CNET News seems to confirm this news:

VMware, an EMC subsidiary whose software lets multiple operating systems run on the same computer, is expected to announce next week that it will begin giving away one of its key products for free.

The company sells three core products, VMware Workstation, GSX Server and ESX Server, but competition is on the horizon in a market VMware once had to itself. On Monday, however, the company is expected to announce it will give away GSX for free, sources familiar with the plan said.

Read the whole article at source.

The Register is reporting a slightly different version of the story:


The free product will be called VMware Server and will join the Workstation, GSX Server and ESX Server products. VMware Server relates most closely to the midrange GSX Server product often used by VMware customers to test and and develop software packages. The high-end ESX Server is used for production applications and actually slots in below operating systems such as Windows and Linux, whereas GSX Server and the upcoming VMware Server run on top of the OS.

When plugging VMware Server, which arrives in beta only for the moment, company representatives insisted that we think of the free option as a way to promote virtualization technology.

The VMware Server, for example, has a feature not even present in GSX Server. It supports Intel’s VT technology for improving virtualization performance. In addition, it supports 64-bit guest operating systems – including Solaris x86 – and has support for virtual SMPs. So, it’s not just some crippled, low-end product.

Next week, a beta version of VMware Server will be available here. The product is expected to be fully baked in the first half of this year, and VMware expects to sell plenty of support contracts behind it. Over time, it will effectively replace GSX Server…

Read the whole article at source.

If this is true, and I’m pretty confident it is, VMware will give a huge hit to Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2, now sold at $99, to Xen and to the upcoming Windows Hypervisor.

Thanks to vmdude for pointing me out the CNET News article.

Special report: virtualization in development and testing

DevX just published a great, extended report on virtualization focused on development and testing.

Here the whole list of articles:

XenSource shuffling management team

Quoting from SiliconBeat:

XenSource, a Palo Alto start-up backed by Kleiner Perkins, and active in the open-source “virtualization” area, is shuffling its management team, and has made a few layoffs.

Turns out, co-founder Moshe Bar resigned, and relocated to Texas with his family. And chief executive, Nick Gault is leading the search for his replacement. In addition, several engineers were laid off, as the company shifts its R&D team to the East Coast, where some of the remaining seven co-founders were based anyway…

Read the whole article at source.

Update: SiliconBeat reports details about the XenSource mass leaving: around 20 managers included 2 founders and Michael Enescu, VP of Development.

Thanks to David Rottenberg for the news.

Virtual Machines get replicated

Quoting from Byte and Switch:

Replicating data on virtual servers from the likes of Microsoft and VMware can force users to install multiple servers to accommodate each instance of a virtual-server application (for instance, SQL Server, Exchange, etc.). Not all products can replicate virtual servers remotely. And user-friendly pricing packages that don’t force users to pay for multiple copies of a replication package have been thin on the ground.

It’s important to note that while several products today support data replication of virtual machines on a SAN, we’re talking here about replicating from server to server. And so far, there have been few direct product fixes for the complications involved.

But several firms, including Datacore, NSI Software, and XOsoft are making headway. Next Monday, NSI Software will start shipping Double-Take for Virtual Systems, a product that replicates data from one Windows-based virtual server to another. Users have the option of replicating individual virtual machine applications like Exchange or SQL Server to one or more remote servers. Alternatively, they can replicate the entire virtual-machine server and enable failover in case of disaster…

Read the whole article at source.