Intel packages Virtualization Technology in the new vPro platform

Quoting from the Intel official announcement:

The widely acclaimed Intel® Core™2 Duo processor is at the heart of Intel vPro technology delivering up to a 40 percent increase in performance and a 40 percent increase in energy efficiency.

Intel vPro technology also includes the second generation of Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT), Intel® Virtualization Technology (Intel® VT), the new Intel® Q965 Express chipset and the Intel 82566DM Gigabit Network Connection.

Top enterprise-class software companies from around the world are offering products optimized for Intel vPro technology. Solutions are available today and will continue to arrive to market in the coming months from companies such as Adobe, Altiris, CA, Check Point, Cisco, HP OpenView, LANDesk, Lenovo, Microsoft, StarSoftComm, Symantec, Trend Micro and Zenith…

The virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

After one year from resign Microsoft security executive appears at XenSource

Gordon Mangione, former Corporate Vice President in the Security Technology Unit at Microsoft, resigned its company 1 years ago, in November.

eWeek reported at that time this was a surprise.

Today he reappears in XenSource as Senior Vice President of Product Operations.

Update: The Register reports Mangione is the second former Microsoft executive to join XenSource.

Before him Frank Artale arrived at the company, occuping the role of Vice President of Business Development.

At Microsoft Artale was Vice President of the Windows Business Unit.

Parallels Desktop to support Leopard and Vista

The popular virtualization vendor Parallels in the race to update its product for Apple MacPro hardware, surprisingly added support for the most expected upcoming operating systems: Apple Mac OS X 10.5 (codename Leopard) and Microsoft Windows Vista.

In the just published Release Candidate build the product only supports Leopard developer build and Vista beta 2, but extended support for newer builds is planned.

The new build also supports OpenBSD 3.8.

Download it here.

Release: Provision Networks Virtual Access Suite

Another player appears in the new segment of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) launched by VMware.

This time is Provision Networks which launches its Virtual Access Suite.

Among its features:

  • Highly scalable broker service offering fine-grained, policy-driven VM pool management capabilities including VM creation, deletion, suspension, un-suspension, power-on, power-off, expiration, and access control
  • Management and monitoring features including full-desktop and application publishing, VM status reporting, and session usage monitoring
  • Fault management allowing users to be temporarily redirected to a free VM in the event that of a primary VM failure
  • Fine-grained access control via Access Control Lists (ACL) and virtual channel policies
  • Access infrastructure including a Web interface and SSL VPN
  • Client connectivity options including RDP and RDP-over-SSL, and client device support including Windows, WinCE, Java, and PXE
  • Extensive user experience and last-mile technologies including seamless windows, session sharing, Kerberos authentication, universal print driver, USB handheld redirection, and more

Check complete feature list and some demos.

The virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

VMware Virtual Machines Importer 2.0 Release Candidate now available

One of the biggest selling point of VMware products is portability of virtual machines among all platforms.

To work flawless this process relies on compatibility between the virtualization platform and the virtual hardware generation featured by every virtual machine.
In some cases a possible mismatch denies powering on your VM.

To prevent such scenarios VMware is developing the second generation of its Virtual Machine Importer, already able to do a much wanted operation: import Microsoft virtual machines and Symantec Ghost (now included in the Backup Exec System Recovery family) computer images.

In this new version the tool is able to manipulate every kind of virtual machine and make it compatible with all most recent VMware products, including Server 1.0 and ESX Server 3.0.

The just published Release Candidate (build 30557) has still some serious compatibility issues, mostly with Linux and 64-bit operating systems in general.
So better read the release notes before downloading it.

Tech: VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation map

Given its complexity finding the best support document for a particular Infrastructure 3 (aka ESX Server 3.0 + VirtualCenter 2.0) aspect could be challenging.

For this reason VMware published a very nice Documentation Roadmap (in this case the term roadmap doesn’t involve description of new features), detailing what help file is available for each feature and suggesting a reading path on issues basis.

Print it and put on the wall is highly suggested.

Simplify 64bits adoption with virtualization

The IT industry is starting to migrate in a new 64bits world.

The slow movement will greatly accelerate as soon as new critical products will be releases in 64bits versions only.

Companies jumping on the bandwagon before others will have to great opportunity to offer significantly improved performances and successfully front today’s scalability requirements.

But benefits are proportional to complexity and the adoption can be an expensive challenge.

To simplify the process another IT phenomenon of the decade comes to help: server virtualization.

The problem

Moving to 64bits is risky and should be planned very carefully. Why?

First of all because it will be slow, and during the whole process, which could take up to 10 years to complete, companies will have to handle mixed environments, with 64bits operating systems already available but some mission critical applications still in 32bits.

It’s we see, even on a smaller scale, every time we deploy a new operating system: benefits from new technology enhancements are unreachable just because one business application is not supported in the new platform. And CIOs have to wait years before starting to update infrastructures.

In the same fashion embracing 64bits technology and its benefits could take years, until all applications driving our business are not ported and proven to be reliable on the new architecture.

The wait in this case could be much longer than waiting an application being ported from Windows NT 4.0 to 2000, and could cost much more money.

A second problem is related with hardware population: deciding to approach 64bits early in the industry conversion means having 2 different architectures to choose, buy, manage.

But most of all it means having useless hardware as soon as applications are ported.

Something you cannot avoid

Given so much issues it’s easy to think 64bits migration is something to avoid until it will be a de facto standard. But even deciding to postpone, it’s a step we could be forced to do sooner than expected.

One after another biggest vendors will start offering their products just in 64bits edition since the new architecture will be able to provide new degrees of scalability and performances, long required by customers.

Microsoft is the first company making this step, announcing its intention to develop several products in 64bits only, including the popular Exchange mail server, the new Windows 2003 Compute Cluster edition and one edition of its upcoming Windows codename Longhorn.

A complete switch off of 32bits production is expected somewhere around 2010.
Meanwhile Microsoft is already offering both versions for several critical products, like Windows XP and 2003, SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005.

The giant software maker is not alone: many other vendors, including market leaders like Apple, IBM, Novell, Oracle, Red Hat, Sun, are developing, or already offering, their products for new architecture, claiming up to 10x performances gain.

On the hardware side both AMD and Intel counts on a technology able to run concurrently and transparently 32 and 64bits code, and are selling just 64bits processors for servers, desktops and laptops.

Thanks to them the hardware side of the adoption will complete much earlier than the software one.

How virtualization can help

To simplify management of 32 and 64bits mixed infrastructure, during the whole migration process, server virtualization surely often appears the best approach.

At the time of writing no virtualization platform has been written for the new architecture, but many are able to run 64bits virtual machines, thanks to new CPUs capabilities mentioned above.

The market leader, VMware, is able to run 64bits guest OSes in all its products, including the new ESX Server 3.0, the upcoming Server 1.0, and popular Workstation 5.5.1, but has limitations on supported processors: following table will detail which one is supported.

AMD Intel
Opteron revision E or later Intel EM64T
VT-capable processors
Athlon 64 revision D or later
Turion 64 revision E or later
Sempron 64 revision D or later

(note that there is no way to recognize revision of AMD CPUs until you test them, so VMware suggests contacting the vendor itself for help).

Xen 3.0 is also able to run a mixed virtual infrastructure, and Virtual Iron, now based on Xen, will be able too since its release 3.0, expected at the end of the year.

Microsoft will support 64bits hosts OSes within its Virtual Server 2005 R2 thanks to the upcoming Service Pack 1, but decided to wait its Windows Server Virtualization before permitting to run 64bits virtual machines.

And since Windows Server Virtualization in expected within two years, we can safely assume Microsoft technology is not a viable solution for 64bits early adopters.

Thanks to VMware, Xen, AMD, Intel and others that will come, deciding to adopt the next generation architecture can be smoother and cheaper than expected.

Depending on your business needs you could approach the migration with two opposite strategies.

The first one consists in moving existing 32bits applications in virtual machines, while modernizing hardware population and testing new products on new servers.

In this way virtual machines will act as hot-standby proven solutions when we’ll decide to adopt 64bits applications, without introducing significant efforts in maintaining two different machine sets.

And as side benefit the dismantling of 32bits servers will proceed much faster.

This strategy is the most aggressive and is probably better for companies trying to gain benefits from new architecture as soon as possible.

The opposite approach consists in maintaining existing 32bits hardware population and carefully introducing 64bits new applications just in virtual machines, where new products can be tested and verified.

The huge missing of 64bits drivers for many real devices makes virtual environments a more stable platform where to work.

This strategy fits better in mission-critical scenarios, but it’s likely to force virtualization adoption: if at a certain point the company decides to move back applications on real hardware the whole process could be painful.

For this reason it’s better go this path only if server consolidation was already estimated.

In many cases some companies will find useful adopt both strategies at the same time, depending on departments.

Whatever direction you’ll adopt at today the only possibility is buying a 64bits physical host where to install a 32bits operating system.

Luckily this won’t hurt because at the right moment, when virtualization firms will be ready to offer 64bits solutions, we’ll be able to change the host OS and the virtualization platform without rebuilding existing virtual machines.

And thanks to high availability solutions the operation will occur even without business interruption.

This article originally appeared on SearchServerVirtualization.

virtualization.info launches 1st Industry Survey

virtualization.info launches its first Virtualization Industry Survey.

Many famous research firms have published surveys about virtualization so far, but most of them have 3 typical problems:

  • are often committed by a main player, influencing results interpretation
  • are often very expensive
  • are always focused on adoption trends, missing to report the actual state of the industry

The Virtualization Industry Survey aims to address these issues being conducted from an impartial point of view, providing results at no cost, and focusing on what existing virtualization customers are doing and what they would like to do with the technology.

virtualization.info needs your help to better picture where the industry actually is, where is going, and what customers are really looking for.

The final report will be published later this year, will be available for free to all readers, and will be sent to all virtualization vendors.

Start the survey.

VMware ESX Server will allow 3rd party storage add-on integration

VMworld 2006 sessions deserve more surprises. Apart sessions on new technologies, like Workstation 6.0, ACE 2.0, Virtual Lab Manager 1.0 and VMmark, already mentioned before, VMware will disclose a breaking new storage architecture for its datacenter product: ESXServer.

In the just added TAC9564 session, The Future of VMware ESX Server Storage: A Pluggable Storage Architecture, VMware reveals:

Current VMware ESX Server implementations do not allow third party software vendors to run their propriety multipathing and load balancing software within the vmkernel. As well, SAN array hardware vendors are not able to load device specific drivers in the vmkernel to allow access to advanced array features. This session describes two forward-looking projects designed to address these limitations: the ESX Server MPIO Multipathing Framework and the ESX Server Native Multipathing Plugin based on the ESX Server MPIO Framework.

I would like to remember that this year virtualization.info will be present at the event.

Register for it here.