VMware accelerating staff expansion

Quoting from MetroWest Daily News:


The Palo Alto, Calif.-based virtualization software company moved its 50-person Massachusetts unit from a 17,000-square-foot Cambridge facility, where “we were overflowing,” into a 50,000-square-foot office earlier this month, said Julia Austin, senior director of research and development and site director for VMware’s Cambridge office.

VMware employs about 2,000 people worldwide.

The Cambridge office, where VMware is shifting some product development operations, employs 60 people now and will be adding up to 115 by the end of next year, for a total of up to 175, Austin said…

Read the whole article at source.

Release: vizioncore esxRanger Professional 2.0

vizioncore launched the second release of its highly popular live backup solution for VMware ESX Server, esxRanger Professional, just 1 month after the 1.78 release.

In 2.0 release, supporting the new VMware Infrastructure 3, vizioncore introduces the most wanted differential backup, able to save only parts of the virtual machine which are really changed, improving backup speed and storage use.

It also introduces an Archive Retention Policy system, able to remove old backup images following adminstrator’s directives.

esxRanger Professional 2.0 adopts a licensing model per processor and its price starts at $499.

Download it here

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

Microsoft allows free redistribution of Virtual Server and Virtual PC

With an unexpected move Microsoft changed agreement terms of its virtualization products and allows anybody to freely redistribute them within proprietary applications.

In particular Virtual Server 2005 R2 (both x86 and x64 editions) requires to sign a Redistrbution Rights licensing agreement, while Virtual PC 2004 automatically grants this right in the EULA.

The upcoming Virtual PC 2007 will be redistributable as well.

Microsoft launches Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1 beta 2

Microsoft made available on its beta center Connect the second milestone of highly expected Service Pack 1 for Virtual Server 2005 R2.

This new beta reveals, among others, the feature which makes SP1 so desirable: the Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) support.

Supporting VSS substantially means Virtual Server is now able to do backup of running virtual machines without stopping them or interrupting the service.

Virtual machines live backup is one of the most wanted capability virtualization professionals ask for and its availability raises further competition with VMware, which at the moment is offering something similar, the VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB), only on the most expensive edition of ESX Server 3.0 and only when a SAN storage is used.

Other features introduced in this version are:

  • support for hardware-assisted virtualization (both AMD SVM and Intel VT)
  • capability to publish informations on Active Directory
  • capability to mound virtual harddisks (.vhd) offline through the VHDmount utility

Enroll for the beta here.

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

Russian entrepreneur controls a dormant virtualization giant

What Acronis, Parallels and SWsoft have in common?

The three companies fund part or the whole business in virtualization market:

But this is not the only thing they have in common: while at the moment all firms are separated entities, are all financed by the S&W Group, an holding founded by Serguei Beloussov.

The russian entrepreneur is the CEO of SWsoft, covering the same role for Acronis until October 2005, while his name doesn’t appear in direct relationship with Parallels.

This tight connection, mostly for the Parallels part, has never been advertised even if Acronis and SWsoft already arranged a partnership in 2004 (note that in the annoucement Mr. Beloussov didn’t figure as the CEO of both companies).

The question is if and when Acronis, Parallels and SWsoft will merge together to launch a multi-form virtualization offering like the one Microsoft is building.

Tool: Live View

The popular security organization CERT released a new forensic analysis tool for Windows: Live View.

As I said in many occasions virtualization is one of the best tool security professionals could ever have.

In particular forensic analysis is greatly helped by the virtualization capability to copy a whole physical server and deploy the image on a virtual machine, without altering its content. A process we use to call physical to virtual (P2V) migration.

So by chance, Live View is great acquisition tool for forensic analysis professionals and at the same time a great P2V tool for all virtualization professionals.

It’s able to work on any image grabbed with the unix tool dd or directly attached disk (if you decided to remove it from the physical machine) and convert it in a virtual disk, to be used with VMware Server, Workstation or Player.

It automatically creates a virtual machine with disconnected ethernet (which is for security reasons but it’s highly useful fto avoid network conflicts also) and a snapshot, to avoid compromising the original image.

As I said Live View needs an existing disk image. So the problem for some virtualization professionals is how to generate it.

Among many available tools I suggest one which satisfy following requirements:

  • works as liveCD (avoiding to install anything on the source machine and possibly working with the large majority of existing hardware)
  • is small and fast (to reduce hardware requirements and boot time)
  • supports a wide amount of disk technologies (IDE, SATA, SCSI), disk controllers (ISA, PCI) and disk configurations (RAID)
  • automatically mounts physical disks on the source machine (to simplify the task and reduce migration time)
  • is able to send the generated image by network (acquiring an IP address by DHCP or with manual configuration)
  • is able to send the generated image on a directly attached USB disk or on a remote FTP server
  • is easy enough to not get lost with complex configuration and command strings

These requirements are all satisfied by the valuable g4u (ghost for unix) project, which is a customized NetBSD liveCD.

Both g4u and Live View are free of charge.

Sage Research finds out great customers expertise in hardware-assisted virtualization

Quoting from ComputerWorld:


Moreover, other results of the survey, which involved 265 IT decision-makers at companies with 500 or more employees, show that organizations that are already using server virtualization or that are interested in the technology are doing so mostly to increase efficiency and utilization of their servers (84%) and lower data center costs (72%) — the basic and successful marketing mantra espoused by current market leader VMware Inc.

Eighteeen percent of respondents said they were “very familiar” with chip-assisted virtualization technology, such as Intel Corp.’s VT or Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s AMD-V. Meanwhile, a third of respondents claimed to be “very familiar” with either hardware-assisted virtualization, which promises to offer faster performance than VMware’s more software-heavy approach, or open-source virtualization software such as Xen, Open VZ or Virtual Iron…

Read the whole article at source.

It’s notable so much familiarity with hardware-assisted virtualization when VMware just reported they don’t improve performances at all. Au contraire.

Stream Theory obtains another software streaming patent

Quoting from the Stream Theory official announcement:

Stream Theory, Inc., a leading developer of patented virtualized software delivery and digital rights management solutions, today announced it has been awarded U.S. Patent number 7,096,253 for “Method and Apparatus for Streaming Software.” The patent, which covers core technology related to streaming remotely located software programs and data to a local computer, underpins the Company’s worldwide leadership role in virtualized software delivery…

Stream Theory is the company which filed a lawsuit against Softricity (and AppStream and Exent) immediately after its acquisition by Microsoft, for infringment of its patent number 6,453,334.

This new patent could further enforce its position against Microsoft and other vendors working on streaming technologies.

The risk of using free virtualization products

Since the launch of VMware Player, the first free desktop virtualization solution, and Microsoft Virtual Server, the first free server virtualization solution, the IT world has never been the same.
A revolution in the way of thinking about computing resources started, and it will greatly accelerate now that also VMware Server 1.0 and Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 have been releases as free products.

At this moment the IT world is shaking up by two concurrent phenomenons at the same time: on a side the server virtualization technology itself and on the other side the fact virtualization didn’t ever have the chance to become mainstream and it’s already completely free.

While free virtualization is a huge benefit for the whole industry, obtaining it so fast could bring in a lot of issues.

The problem
Problems free virtualization could raise in the next years mainly depend on three factors: technology complexity, critical role in business, easiness in adoption.

A virtualized datacenter involves new challenges, and IT staff has to handle technical incompatibilities, performances penalties, lacks of products support, interoperability, accountability, and many others.
Professionals and companies had no enough time to become really expert in handling all of this in the new scenarios. There are so many aspects still to be fully understood and so much experience to collect before reaching the level of confidence we have today with physical server.

While desktop virtualization has a large diffusion but a limited impact on the way business services are offered, server virtualization completely changes the approach to datacenter, from hardware purchasing to resources management.
While desktop virtualization is a technology companies can decide to forgo at any moment if it doesn’t meet certain expectations, server virtualization is a no way back adoption most of times.

The fact today’s free solutions yesterday were commercial products, advertised as enterprise grade solutions, imply companies from small business to enterprise, will embrace them, both because are at no cost and because are trusted as reliable. And when a much desirable technology suddenly becomes free, a mass of professionals approach it, with or without required knowledge.

Where’s the risk? The biggest one is for small and medium companies which surely see in free server virtualization the biggest opportunity to lower costs.
In these realities time and budget allocated for IT staff training or outsourcing consulting and for testing is small or non-existent and often happens technologies are thrown in production without adequate skills and experience.

Here comes the technology complexity and multiple factors which could compromise a virtualization project: a poor capacity planning, superficiality in host and guest OSes configuration, missing policies for virtual machines provisioning, lack of knowledge for needed third party tools, poor investigation in supported configurations. All elements with lead to disappointing performances, virtual machines sprawl and increased efforts in management.

Such bad results will not only translates in many money required to correct deficiencies or revert back to physical server, but will also become the reason why companies will stay away from virtualization as much as possible, believing the technology is much less useful and reliable than expected.

At the end of the day surrendering the mirage of a complex solution such server virtualization available at no cost will damage companies in the short and medium term.

Future trends
It’s pretty sure server virtualization will remain free, will extend to the datacenter class solutions, now still a profitable part of the vendors offering, and will become pervasive, included in every operating system.

The biggest contribution in this direction will arrive from Microsoft which announced will embed a new virtualization technology called Windows Server Virtualization inside upcoming versions of its server operating system, codename Longhorn.

Within two years or little more virtualization as a commodity will appears in millions of installations, becoming a de-facto standard in datacenter architectures.

Investing in training or consulting today is not just a way to ensure free virtualization will deliver supposed benefits, but it’s also a way to build knowledge and be ahead of competition in the near future.

Conclusion
Free virtualization could appear as a very simple technology to solve very complex problems, and this appearance could lead to not consider mandatory an investment in training or outsourcing help.

The reality is today’s virtualization is very hard to handle and requires new capabilities IT staff doesn’t have.
Companies going to adopt free virtualization too easily could face stop issues at a point of the project so that correcting or reverting back to physical server will result in big waste of money.

This article originally appeared on SearchServerVirtualization.