Red Hat wants Xen in Linux kernel

Quoting from eWeek:

Linux vendor Red Hat Inc. is aggressively pushing to get Xen virtualization technology included in the Linux kernel as quickly as possible.

Brian Stevens, the newly appointed chief technology officer of the Raleigh, N.C., company, said that previous efforts to merge Xen into the kernel ran out of steam when nobody stepped forward to drive them. Red Hat is now stepping forward, Stevens said.

This move comes as Microsoft Corp. is pushing its own virtualization products and recently relaxed some of its licensing requirements around Windows Server 2003 to facilitate more pervasive adoption and use of those technologies.

Part of the Red Hat emerging technology team’s efforts will be to drive the Xen virtualization technologies as part of the Linux kernel rather than as part of a sidebar project, as is currently the case, Stevens said.

“My goal is to get this done in the most collaborative way possible with anyone in the community who wants to participate,” Stevens said, adding that Red Hat is committed to putting on this project enough of its staff who have the technical knowledge necessary to get the work done.

In addition, it recently hired an additional six staff members in the virtualization area alone. “We haven’t been able to focus enough on this until now to help get it done. So we’ve stepped up to work on this and help get it done. We’d like to have this done in the next two months. I don’t think it’s a long-term project at all,” he said.

A big part of the strategy is making virtualization and its management a part of a Linux system, “so this is not just maturing the technology but having the operating system itself, the kernel itself, be intimately aware that it is being virtualized so that it participates,” Stevens said.

Andrew Morton, the current maintainer of the Linux 2.6 kernel, who works for the Open Source Development Labs, in Beaverton, Ore., told eWEEK that he had expected a submission of Cambridge University’s Computer Laboratories’ Xen virtualization technology for merging into the Linux kernel quite some time ago.

“But Red Hat is a strong engineering company, and I trust them to produce a good contribution and to support it,” he said.

Once a contribution emerges from a development team, Morton said he will actively identify other stakeholders and solicit their feedback. “There are quite a few stakeholders here, including XenSource, Red Hat, IBM and Intel,” he said. “VMware is also working on virtualization in general, and they will provide feedback on the proposed design.

“I’ll then make decisions based upon that. As we haven’t recently gone through that process on Xen, I am not able to predict who will react, and how. So, the bottom line is that it is too early for me to say how it will turn out,” Morton said.

Ian Pratt, of the University of Cambridge in England and the leader of the Xen project, said there were a number of reasons for the delay in including Xen in the kernel. Primarily, Xen 3.0 had suffered from a bit of feature creep. Physical Address Extension (PAE) 32b support and Virtualization Technology, for example, were added very late in the cycle. “We were aiming for an end-of-summer release, but this now looks on target for December,” Pratt said.

It didn’t make much sense to start preparing patches for sending upstream until the Xen 3 guest API was close to being frozen, because there is a significant resource cost in maintaining multiple trees, he said.

“We hit this point a month or so back, and there’s actually been a lot of activity since then,” Pratt said. “We’ve done a first cut reorganization of our patch into the form that was agreed on at the last Xen summit, forward ported it to the head of Linus [Torvalds’] tree, and put out a call for help to Red Hat, SuSE, IBM, HP and all the other stakeholders to help us beat it into shape. It’s great to see them stepping up and promising to commit some of their best guys to help.”

The technology is certainly ready for inclusion in the kernel, he said. Rearranging the patch into a form that fits in better with the existing code base needs to happen first, but this is fairly mechanical.

“We maintained our patch in a form that made our life easier, and helped us track stable Linux versions while getting the stability of our own software right. It’s now time to make the change,” Pratt said.

Pratt’s confident that a patch will be ready to be submitted for inclusion in the kernel within two months, as none of the reorganization and cleanup work that needs to happen is very hard, “but it is essential we get the aesthetics right. But whether Andrew/Linus accept it is a different matter,” Pratt said.

He welcomes Red Hat’s support, saying they have good engineers that are well-known and respected in the Linux community, which is bound to make the process run smoother. “SuSE, IBM, HP are all helping the XenSource team too, just maybe not so publicly,” he said.

Asked what recent contributions the vendors have made to the technology, Pratt said that IBM’s MAC stuff is in, as is support for Intel VT-x. Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s Pacifica support is working well too, but will not make Xen Version 3.0.0.

“Further down the line we’re doing some cool stuff with I/O vendors that will result in zero cost I/O virtualization. HP had contributed some useful tools for performance profiling and instrumentation, while SuSE had had helped with PAE support and Intel with x86_64,” he said.

A lot of companies, most notably IBM, are also helping with testing. “We’ve had a lot of support from individuals in the Xen community too,” Pratt said. “Xen 3.0 is a big team effort. It is just taking a little longer than we’d hoped.”

John Loiacono, executive vice president for software at Sun Microsystems Inc., welcomed the move to drive the virtualization technology around Linux forward.

Any aggressive move by Red Hat to get the technology into the Linux kernel will be fully supported by Sun, which is embracing the Xen virtualization technology across its products and plat-forms. It has some of its brightest engineers working on this and is collaborating with others in the open-source community, Loiacono said.

Even Sam Greenblatt, a senior vice president at Computer Associates International Inc., told eWEEK that he is pleased with the progress made with Xen. CA will support anything going into the kernel that supports virtualization. “It’s come a long way. We just want to be careful to make sure it goes in the right way,” he said.

That marks a significant turnaround from earlier this year, when Greenblatt told eWEEK, “We think [Xen] is great innovation, but its concept of virtualization is still not to the point that we want to see in there [the kernel].”

Red Hat’s Stevens said his goal is to make virtualization as ubiquitous as possible, thereby allowing customers to decide whether they need it or not. “Our strategy is around how to make it ubiquitous, what are all the issues that make it ubiquitous and part of the platform,” he said.

“But when you get there, a range of great benefits comes with it, like the agility of being able to migrate workloads, suspend workloads, drive up utilization on a system because now you can isolate workloads from each other whereas before an entire box had to be dedicated to a specific application,” he said.

But this will require an entirely new management infrastructure around it as those that exist today revolve around managing physical boxes. “While people are extending the existing management platforms to virtual boxes, what they are not doing is changing the management paradigm, and that needs to change to one where applications, systems and resources are just meeting for a point in time. This needs to be more of a brokering system than the management of physical systems,” Stevens said.

While XenSource founder Pratt said an “entirely new management paradigm and infrastructure” is not needed to make good use of virtualization, it would enable this and could “save the big shops a ton of money by doing so.”

“XenSource will be one of the companies offering management solutions around Xen, along with a bunch of others. Hopefully XenSource’s will be best as we’ve been working on this topic in the university for a long time, so we have some deep control and automation facilities rather than just a flashy GUI,” he said.

Create VMware VMX configuration files easily

Ulli Hankeln, mantaining his Sanbarrow.com dedicated to VMware hacking, created another great utility: the VMX-builder.

VMX-builder is a simple Windows batch script able to create a VMware virtual machine configuration file (.vmx) from scratch.

I previously posted a method to manually map ISOs to empty virtual machines and run them inside the new VMware Player. With VMX-builder you can speed up the process and create much more complex configuration files.

The utility doesn’t produce virtual disks (.vmdk) from scratch so if you want one inside your virtual machine you still need to follow my manual method.

Update: Someone produced even a super-complete .vmx web builder:
http://www.consolevision.com/members/dcgrendel/vmxform.html

Thanks to Rob for the advice.

Whitepaper: Configuring VMware ACE as a primary desktop environment

VMware ACE is an interesting product applying virtualization for security tasks. I personally found it usable in many enterprise environments where other solutions would cost too much or wouldn’t provide the features I was in need to stay secure and flexible.
I consider ACE one of the most undestimated security product available on market.

VMware just released a new paper on how to deploy ACE in the correct way to limit users ability to damage underlying operating system.

Akimbi to embed PlateSpin OS technology into Slingshot C3R System

Quoting from the Akimbi official announcement:

Akimbi Systems and PlateSpin today announced an agreement in which Akimbi Systems will integrate PlateSpin’s OS Portability technology into Akimbi’s complex configuration capture-and-restore (C3R) system, Akimbi Slingshot. This partnership will enable customers to more quickly integrate a C3R solution into their software development and test processes and infrastructure, resulting in higher-quality software systems, built more rapidly and at a
lower total cost.

PlateSpin’s OS Portability technology enables the complete interchange of data, applications and operating systems across the data center. Integrating PlateSpin’s OS Portability technology with Akimbi Slingshot will allow customers to automate the movement of complex, multi-machine configurations between physical and virtual servers, making it quick and easy to capture “live” interdependent software systems and store, move and restore them across the organization.

“With embedded PlateSpin OS Portability technology, Akimbi Slingshot allows customers to effortlessly import pre-existing test and development systems into an Akimbi Slingshot library, in stark contrast to the painstaking, manual creation of templates and configurations imposed by other solutions,” said James Phillips, CEO of Akimbi Systems. “This capability also lays a foundation for seamless migration of configurations across development, test, staging and production environments.
Akimbi Slingshot is now the only commercial C3R system capable of the automated movement of complex, multi-machine software configurations across the physical-virtual infrastructure boundary.”

Announced in September, Akimbi Slingshot is purpose built for use by software development and test teams, and automates the creation, capture, storage, sharing and restoration of even the most complex multi-machine software configurations to a pool of shared servers. Akimbi Slingshot is employed by many of the worlds most effective software development organizations, enabling them to shave months off software development projects, reduce development and test equipment costs and dramatically increase the quality of delivered software systems.

Akimbi’s OEM licensing agreement with PlateSpin provides Akimbi Slingshot with automated physical-to-virtual (P2V), virtual-to-virtual (V2V) and virtual-to-physical (V2P) migration capabilities.

“This is an exciting time for both PlateSpin and Akimbi,” said Stephen Pollack, PlateSpin CEO. “The integration of PlateSpin’s OS Portability technology with Akimbi Slingshot results in a best-of-breed turnkey solution that addresses key pain points faced by software development and test organizations in the Global 2000. The ability of PlateSpin’s OS Portability technology to automate the migrations of data, applications, and operating systems between physical servers and virtual machines is a perfect match with Akimbi Slingshot’s capture and restore capabilities. The result is a winning solution for the expanding virtualization market and for both Akimbi and PlateSpin customers alike.”

PolyServe delivers on Microsoft’s Virtualization Roadmap

Quoting from the PolyServe official announcement:

PolyServe, Inc. today announced the company’s support of Microsoft’s virtualization strategy, technologies and licensing. Additionally, PolyServe reasserted the company’s commitment to the ongoing development of industry-leading server consolidation solutions based on Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2.

PolyServe is in lock-step with Microsoft’s virtualization roadmap by providing server and storage virtualization and flexible resource utilization on industry-standard servers and storage. PolyServe Matrix Server™ shared data clustering software consolidates servers and storage into a pool of resources for a true mission-critical, utility computing infrastructure for Windows data centers.

“We share Microsoft’s vision for leveraging virtualization technology to create a more agile, dynamic infrastructure,” said Mike Stankey, president and CEO of PolyServe. “Combining our shared data clustering software with Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2, we’re able to run multiple applications across a highly available and easily managed cluster of physical servers and storage. The result is an ideal solution for large enterprises that aim to consolidate applications in an on-demand utility for a significant savings in management costs.”

“Microsoft is pleased to work with PolyServe to deliver data center virtualization solutions to our joint customers,” said Zane Adam, director of marketing, Windows Server Division, Microsoft Corp. “The combination of PolyServe Matrix Server and Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 delivers immediate benefits for server consolidation, application re-hosting and disaster tolerance for large-scale, mission-critical deployments.”

PolyServe has openly embraced the open, standards-based Windows Server System, and supports Microsoft’s investments in virtualization and virtualization management technologies. Virtual Server 2005 runs seamlessly on PolyServe Matrix Server for a comprehensive consolidation solution for enterprises customers. With Matrix Server software and Virtual Server 2005, it is possible to consolidate applications formerly running on many physical machines onto virtual machines running on fewer physical host servers.

Virtual Server 2005 R2 is a logical addition to the PolyServe family of solutions that support Microsoft customers. The strong PolyServe customer base for SQL Server and Windows file serving applications will benefit by being able to further consolidate multiple physical servers into a shared data cluster with Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2. PolyServe enhances the Microsoft Virtual Server solution by providing high availability services for Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 itself, shared data clustering for benefits in data consolidation and management and PolyServe Matrix Manager, a centralized cluster management console.

Microsoft changes its support for VMware

Quoting from Bink.nu:

Today Microsoft changed its support towards Microsoft software running on VMware serveres (and virtual software in general).

Untill yesterday if you had a Microsoft Premier Support contract and you had a problem with a Windows server running in a virtual machine running on VMware GSX or ESX server, the support engineer would not help you. In those cases you had to re produce the problem on physical hardware, even with Premier Support contract.

Today that has changed, a bit, read carefully:

For Microsoft customers who have a Premier-level support agreement, Microsoft will use commercially reasonable efforts to investigate potential issues with Microsoft software running in conjunction with non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software. As part of that investigation, Microsoft may require the issue to be reproduced independently from the non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software. Where issues are confirmed to be unrelated to the non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software, Microsoft will support its software in a manner that is consistent with support provided when that software is not running in conjunction with non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software.

Well it’s better then before,

Non-premier customers don’t get this support:

Microsoft does not test or support Microsoft software running in conjunction with non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software. For Microsoft customers who do not have a Premier-level support agreement, Microsoft will require the issue to be reproduced independently from the non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software. Where the issue is confirmed to be unrelated to the non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software, Microsoft will support its software in a manner that is consistent with support provided when that software is not running in conjunction with non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software.

Complete KB: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/897615

Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 to ship within 3 weeks

Quoting Jeff Alexander blog, via Bink.nu:

One of the most requested applications customers want to see supported on Virtual Server is Exchange. Well today is a good day because we have just announced support for Exchange runnining on Virtual Server. With the release of Exchange Server 2003 SP2 we now support Exchange running on Virtual Server 2005 R2 release. This means you will have to be using Virtual Server 2005 R2 to get this support.

The last I heard is we are 3 weeks away from shipping the R2 version of Virtual Server so this combination of products will be realised very soon.

Check out the web link for more support information:
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=320220

Whitepaper: Running Microsoft Exchange Server in a virtual machine using VMware ESX Server

VMware released this great paper about deploying one of the most troublesome and critical Microsoft back-end server, Exchange Server 2003:
http://www.vmware.com/pdf/exchange_wp_eng.pdf

Here the table of contents:

  • Introduction
  • Problem Statement
  • Business Needs
  • Executive Summary
  • Architecture
  • Introduction to Microsoft Exchange Server 2003
  • Introduction to VMware ESX Server
  • VMware Terminology
  • VMware ESX Server
  • VMware ESX Server Architectures
  • VMware as an Alternative
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Virtualized Exchange Solutions
  • Deployment Options
  • Hardware Configuration
  • Software Configuration
  • Exchange Server Deployment Tools
  • Exchange Server 2003 Use Case: Design and Architecture at VMware
  • Hardware Design and Configuration
  • ESX Server Configuration
  • Exchange
  • Server Configuration
  • Conclusion

An absolute must read.