Microsoft unlocks SQL Server 2005 license for virtualization

Microsoft takes another step towards licensing restyling for virtualization scenarios with release of SQL Server 2005 Service Pack 2.

Quoting from the official announcement:

Microsoft Corp. today released Microsoft SQL Server 2005 SP2, an update to its award-winning data management and analysis platform. Customers can now take advantage of enhancements in the familiar and easy-to-use Windows Vista operating system and 2007 Microsoft Office system to easily connect and integrate with the power, security and reliability of SQL Server 2005.

In addition, Microsoft announced that it is expanding virtualization use rights to allow unlimited virtual instances on servers that are fully licensed for SQL Server 2005 Enterprise Edition. For customers who want maximum flexibility in their use of virtualization technology, now or in the future, SQL Server 2005 Enterprise Edition is the ideal choice.

This is an impressive move from Microsoft: at this point buying a Windows Server 2003 R2 Datacenter Edition and a single SQL Server 2005 Enterprise Edition means having limitless databases in your infrastructure.

Previous evaluations of company strategy about virtualization are now to be reconsidered: when Microsoft released for free its Virtual Server 2005 R2 and subsequently unlocked its licensing model in virtualization scenarios for Windows Server 2003 R2, several analysts highlighted those moves as part of a sharp tactic to sell more back-end servers licenses (mainly for SQL Server and Exchange Server).

But looking at this announcement and remembering the new Exchange Server 2007 isn’t supported in virtual machines at the moment, such reading is far to be confirmed.

Please note this new licensing model applies to any virtualization platforms, not only Microsoft Virtual Server 2005.

KVM to be included in Fedora 7

Quoting from ZDNet:

Red Hat, the dominant Linux seller, will include KVM (Kernel Virtual Machine) in the next version of its hobbyist Linux version, Fedora, Chief Technology Officer Brian Stevens said Tuesday. “We’re packaging it for Fedora 7,” Stevens said.

However, Stevens said, KVM lags another open-source virtualization technology, Xen, which is the single biggest new feature in the company’s upcoming Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5. “There’s a year of work, I’d guess, to really make it at parity where Xen is today,” Stevens said…

Read the whole article at source.

VMware partners with StorageCraft

Quoting from the StorageCraft official announcement:

StorageCraft has licensed its Volume Snapshot Manager (VSM) to VMware for use in VMware Converter 3.0, which allows for easy migration of systems to a virtual environment. VMware Converter 3.0 uses StorageCraft technology to speed up the time it takes to migrate to virtual systems. StorageCraft VSM is used in VMware Image Converter 3.0 to complete hot migrations of Windows systems.

StorageCraft Volume Snapshot Manager captures a hot snapshot of a system, allowing administrators to avoid the need to shut down a system when migrating to a VMware virtual machine. This saves time and simplifies the migration process…

Softricity executive leaves for Trigence

Quoting from the Trigence official announcement:

Trigence, the application virtualization leader, today announced that Janet Strackhouse has joined the company’s management team as Vice President of U.S. Sales. Strackhouse comes to Trigence with extensive experience in sales and business development and a strong track record for increasing revenue and market share for several prominent application software providers.

Before joining Trigence, Strackhouse was responsible for North American Sales at Softricity, where she was instrumental in the early formation and growth of the sales organization, resulting in the successful acquisition of Softricity by Microsoft.

Prior to joining Softricity, Strackhouse was part of the initial team responsible for the strategic development and implementation of the enterprise sales organization at Citrix Systems, a leader in application delivery infrastructure…

Europe doesn’t care about virtualization?

Quoting from ZDNet:

According to the latest information from Forrester Research, there has been a growth in the number of European companies that are aware of virtualisation, from 62 percent in 2005 to 78 percent last year. There is also a significant growth in disinterest, with 27 percent of European organisations saying they are not interested in virtualisation compared to 16 percent in 2005.

The percentage of European companies interviewed that are using virtualisation has dropped slightly, from 24 percent in 2005 to 23 percent in 2006. Conversely, the number of organisations piloting virtual systems has doubled, from 6 to 12 percent, year on year…

Read the whole article at source.

Is probably right Europe has a much lower adoption rate for the technology but it seems unlikely european companies are implementing virtualization less than previous year.

As reported in Virtualization Trends 2006 summary, virtualization.info observed a huge interest from U.K, Germany and Netherlands, with an impressive growth from 2005:

  • U.K. – +993%
  • Germany – +668%
  • Netherlands – +900%

Virtual Iron partners with Reflex Security

Quoting from the Virtual Iron official announcement:

Virtual Iron Software, a provider of server virtualization and virtual infrastructure management software solutions, and Reflex Security, Inc. (www.reflexsecurity.com), an innovator in network intrusion prevention, today announced a partnership to deliver Reflex Security’s Reflex Virtual Security Appliance (VSA) specifically designed for Virtual Iron’s virtual infrastructure environment.

General availability of the joint Virtual Iron/Reflex Security virtual appliance is planned for Q2, 2007. It will be available for free via download on Virtual Iron’s Virtual Appliance Exchange and at Reflex Security’s website…

This is the first time a virtual appliance is bundled directly with a virtualization platform. In a near future, just like today is a common practice with Linux distribution, virtualization vendors may push several virtual appliances in their installation media, to provide customers a quick startup for their infrastructures.

OpenVZ tests advanced networking features

Recent improvements in OpenVZ project brought in some notable features in the development branch, including:

  • Delivery of checkpointing and live migration support for IA64 processors
  • Network file system (NFS) support
  • VLAN (IEEE802.1Q) network standard support in virtual environments
  • Filesystem in userspace (FUSE) support
  • I/O accounting for each virtual environment to be followed with a new per-VE I/O scheduling feature added soon

Download last OpenVZ patches for Linux kernel here.

Parallels Desktop 2.5 hits RC3

Waiting for the final release of the much expected Parallels Desktop 2.5 betatesters can now download the release candidate 3 (build 3170) which introduces a couple of interesting things:

  • Windows XP to Windows Vista seamless upgrade
  • Secure drag&drop

Download it here.

HP improves virtualization capabilities in HP-UX 11i v3

Quoting from the HP official announcement:

The HP Virtual Server Environment (VSE) allows HP-UX 11i to go a step further and has integrated virtualization and mainframe-class availability to deliver mission-critical virtualization for customers with the most demanding workloads. HP has broadened the functionality and simplified the deployment of its mission-critical virtualization capabilities for HP-UX 11i:

  • Deployments of virtualized environments are simpler due to the addition of four new VSE Reference Architectures, including ones for Oracle, SAP software and shared services based on HP’s own application server and database implementations. These reference architectures can help cut a customer’s deployment time in half.
  • Mainframe-class availability has been enhanced via HP Serviceguard clustering enhancements, including faster user transparent failover for SAP and the introduction of new levels of disaster tolerance via cascading failover across three data centers.