Surgient partners with PlateSpin

Quoting from the Surgient official announcement:

Surgient, the leader in Virtual Lab Management Applications for automating software test, training and demo labs, and PlateSpin Ltd. today announced a co-development and co-marketing agreement in which PlateSpin’s PowerConvert OS Portability technology will be integrated with Surgient’s Virtual Lab Management Applications.

Today, customers can use Surgient’s Virtual QA/Test Lab Management System (VQMS), Virtual Training Lab Management System (VTMS) and Virtual Demo Lab Management System (VDMS) together with PlateSpin’s PowerConvert to capture, convert and import software configurations. Surgient Virtual Lab solutions and PlateSpin PowerConvert are being more tightly integrated with the integrated solution available in early 2007…

See you at VMworld 2006

virtualization.info will attend VMworld 2006.
During the coming week I’ll encounter many virtualization vendors, attend several sessions and see a number of demos.

For all of you which will not attend VMworld: I cannot grant daily news coverage as usual but I promise a special after-VMworld report.

For all of you which will attend VMworld: I’ll stay in Los Angeles since November 4th, so if you encounter me at Westin Bonaventure hotel, elsewhere in the Los Angeles downtown, or obviously at Convention Center, feel free to stop by and say hello.
I hope to meet as much of you as possible and finally say thank you for being loyal readers of virtualization.info since so much time.

Update: I can finally reveal a big surprise virtualization.info has prepared for VMworld 2006 attendees: inside the welcome bag everybody will find a big, printed version of the Virtualization Industry Roadmap.

This is a special edition realized just for VMworld 2006 and focus just on 2006 releases.

Realizing this gift has been possible thanks to the huge effort of virtualization.info sponsor vizioncore, so if you see these guys around be sure to say thank you!

Microsoft partners with Novell for virtualization

Quoting from the Microsoft official announcement:

Microsoft Corp. and Novell Inc. today announced a set of broad business and technical collaboration agreements to build, market and support a series of new solutions to make Novell and Microsoft products work better together. The two companies also announced an agreement to provide each other’s customers with patent coverage for their respective products. These agreements will be in place until at least 2012.

The agreement between Microsoft and Novell focuses on three technical areas that provide important value and choice to the market:

  • Virtualization
    Virtualization is one of the most important trends in the industry. Customers tell Microsoft that virtualization is one way they can consolidate and more easily manage rapidly growing server workloads and their large set of server applications. Microsoft and Novell will jointly develop a compelling virtualization offering for Linux and Windows
  • Web services for managing physical and virtual servers
    Web services and service-oriented architectures continue to be one of the defining ways software companies can deliver greater value to customers. Microsoft and Novell will undertake work to make it easier for customers to manage mixed Windows and SUSE Linux Enterprise environments and to make it easier for customers to federate Microsoft Active Directory with Novell eDirectory


Under the technical collaboration agreement, the companies will create a joint research facility and pursue new software solutions for virtualization, management and document format compatibility.

Under the business collaboration agreement, the companies will pursue a variety of joint marketing activities to promote the adoption of the technologies they are collaborating on. In addition, Microsoft will purchase a quantity of coupons from Novell that entitle the recipient to a one-year subscription for maintenance and updates to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. Microsoft will annually make available approximately 70,000 of these coupons to customers, with a mix of priority and standard support services. By providing its customers with these coupons, Microsoft is enabling companies to benefit from the use of the new software solutions developed through the collaborative research effort, as well as a version of Linux that is covered with respect to Microsoft?s intellectual property rights…

This announcement has obviously raised a lot of questions and has been read in many ways by Windows and Linux communities.
I can’t see anything extraordinary in it.

Microsoft simply need a Linux enterprise distribution to officially endorse in its upcoming Windows Server Virtualization (WSV) hypervisor (formerly codename Viridian).

The effort in supporting Linux inside virtual machine is significant, even for Microsoft, and such partnership with a Linux distributor permits to partially reduce support issues.

At today there are only two concrete possibilities for a partnership of this kind: Novell and Red Hat.

From my point of view it’s easy to imagine why Microsoft chosen Novell: while SUSE is a solid and innovative distribution, Red Hat has still the market dominance after years of presence.
Microsoft preferred to weak Red Hat leadership chosing its competitor.

At this point Red Hat has some problems offering a trustworthy Windows support over both XenSource, which already has a direct agreement with Microsoft since this summer, and Novell now.
Being involved in Xen development since early beginning, Red Hat surely has capabilities to offer such support, but the real problem is how reliable its support will be percieved by market.

Many companies find the great flexibility of Linux an issue, not a benefit: several need to know the chosen distribution will be supported in every deployment (including virtual datacenters) and most of all will be supported in interoperability scenarios.

Microsoft and Novell agreement may offer that assurance, simplifying management in mixed corporate enviroments where Windows and Linux have to coexist.

Update: PC Pro disclosed economical terms of the agreement: Microsoft will also commit to marketing ‘Linux and Windows virtualization scenarios’ to the tune of $12m and will spend a further $34m putting together a sales team to sell the combined Linux and Microsoft products.

IBM revamps Virtual Machine Manager including Xen support

IBM announced a new tool called Virtualization Manager 1.0.

Worldwide press bounced the news so the product, released as an extension for IBM Director 5 enterprise management solution, seems new.
It isn’t: Virtualization Manager is a revamped and renamed version of old, well-known and much appreciated Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) 2.x, which was already able to control VMware ESX and GSX Servers and Microsoft Virtual Servers.

This new edition introduces preliminary support for Xen (running on Novell SUSE 10) and IBM Virtualization Engine (running on System p), and a valuable web interface, featuring an approach a la VMware VirtualCenter (without needing it):



The biggest win of this product, which is free of charge as the whole Director for IBM customers, is capability to perform migration of virtual machines from a virtualization platform to another:


Download Virtualization Manager here.

Parallels introduces Installation Assistant and Shared Networking

Quoting from the Parallels official announcement:

Parallels is making installation of the Windows operating system on a Mac even easier than installation on a PC with the introduction of the Parallels Installation Assistant. The software comes included as part of Parallels Desktop for Mac…

The Installation Assistant provides a powerful, easy to use ?Express Windows OS Installation Mode? for Windows XP and Windows Vista that completely automates the virtual machine setup and Windows installation processes. Users select which Windows version they plan to use, enter their name, company information and Windows activation key, and then click ?finish? to begin installing Windows in a pre-designed virtual machine that has been optimized for their version of Windows. From that point on, installation is completely automated and requires no user interaction; users do not need to enter any additional information, select settings, or answer any potentially confusing technical questions posed by Windows during installation.

After Windows installation is complete, the Installation Assistant automatically installs Parallels Tools, a free set of useful add-ons that improve networking, video, and sound support, syncs mouse activity and OS system clocks, and enables cutting, copying and pasting of data, as well as and file sharing, between Windows and OS X.

In addition to the Installation Assistant, the new build of Parallels Desktop for Mac offers Shared Networking, a powerful new networking mode that lets users seamlessly connect their virtual machines to the internet via a cable modem, LAN, broadband card, Wi-Fi connection, or dial-up modem, without any manual network reconfiguration. Because Shared Networking enables multiple IP addresses to appear as one IP address on a network, it enables users working with internet connections like DSL or Cable modems that are only configured for use with a single IP address to easily connect their virtual machines to the internet. This same feature also effectively hides virtual machines from the outside world, making them far less likely to be the victim of a hacker attack.

Existing Parallels Desktop for Mac users with auto-update enabled will receive the Installation Assistant and Shared Networking feature automatically…

SPEC evaluating a standard for virtualization benchmarking

While VMware is preparing to show its proposal for virtualization benchmarking, VMmark, the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC) is considering to develop a standard.

Quoting for the SPEC official announcement:

The non-profit Standard Performance Evaluation Corp. (SPEC) has formed a new working group to develop standard methods of comparing virtualization performance for data center servers.

Current SPEC member companies committed to developing a new virtualization measurement standard include AMD, Dell, Fujitsu Siemens, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, IBM, Sun Microsystems, and VMware.

In developing a new virtualization benchmark, SPEC will draw on its expertise in creating widely used system-level benchmark suites such as SPECjAppServer2004 and SPECweb2005…

Where Microsoft is in this initiative?

Book: Guide to Solaris Containers: Virtualization in the Solaris Operating System

Sun Blueprints department released a very interesting 226 pages book about Solaris Containers (aka Zones):

This Sun BluePrints Collection of previously published articles has been thoroughly updated and consolidated into a single book format. It provides an overview of the resource management concepts and technologies that comprise Solaris Containers, and explains how to create, use, and integrate Solaris Containers within a system and infrastructure.

Emphasis is placed on explaining each concept and providing detailed examples that can be used to create more effective environments and effect better resource utilization.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 – Introduction
  • Chapter 2 – Resource Management Concepts
  • Chapter 3 – An In-Depth Look at Containment and Virtualization
  • Chapter 4 – Managing Workloads
  • Chapter 5 – Managing Resources
  • Chapter 6 – Isolating Applications
  • Chapter 7 – Creating Solaris Containers
  • Chapter 8 – Integrating Solaris Containers into the Environment
  • Chapter 9 – Managing the Environment
  • Chapter 10 – Troubleshooting
  • Chapter 11 – Putting It All Together?Deploying Sun Java Enterprise System 2005-Q4 on the Sun Fire T2000 Server Using Solaris Containers

Highly recommended. Read the whole whitepaper at source.

Acronis joins VMware Technology Alliance Partner Program

Quoting from the Acronis official announcement:

Acronis, Inc., a technological leader in storage management software, announced that it has joined the VMware Technology Alliance Partner Program.

The program allows Acronis to optimize its Acronis True Image and Acronis Disk Director products with VMware Virtual Infrastructure 3, virtual infrastructure software for partitioning, consolidating, deploying, backing up and managing servers in mission-critical environments.

As a VMware technology partner, Acronis will further enhance the ability of its disk imaging and disk management products to work closely with VMware products…