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Virtualisation Toolkit

Microsoft accelerates virtualisation plans

Stephen Shankland CNET News.com

Published: 05 Apr 2006 09:20 BST

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Microsoft, faced with virtualization competition and customer demands, is working to bring some technologies to market sooner than it earlier had said.

Virtualisation, which today generally refers to the ability to run multiple operating system instances simultaneously to make a computer more efficient or versatile, is a hot area and one where Microsoft lags rivals. Even as Intel and AMD add virtualisation hardware support to make the technology mainstream, market leader VMware is exerting price pressure on Microsoft while the Xen project is giving Linux a major lead over Windows.

But Mike Neil, product unit manager for Microsoft's virtualisation technologies, is working to keep his company as responsive as possible. Already the company this week announced its Virtual Server product would be offered for free, matching the price of the comparable and more popular VMware Server, but in an interview at LinuxWorld in Boston, Neil outlined several other plans.

For one thing, Microsoft could make pricing changes to accommodate customers who aren't happy counting how many copies of Windows are running on each server. Although the Enterprise Edition licence for Windows Server 2003 permits as many as four instances of Windows to run on one computer, part of the promise of virtualisation is for dynamic computing systems where new virtual machines are created, cloned, paused or deleted rapidly, and it's a burden keeping track of exactly how many copies of what software are running in such fluid environments.

Microsoft said he sequel to Windows Server 2003, code-named Longhorn Server and currently due in 2007, will permit unlimited Windows virtual machines to be used on the same hardware for customers who buy the top-end Datacenter Edition of the operating system. But Neil said on Tuesday that Microsoft is considering making that change to the current OS.

"For customers who go whole hog on virtualisation and don't want to worry about counting — and very few of those exist today — we want to be reactive to that," Neil said.

But computer makers who have different price structures must be coaxed aboard, he added. "The challenge is we have OEM agreements with partners. We have to make them happy with the situation," he said.

Another change that could come sooner than Microsoft said in the past is the arrival schedule of Windows Hypervisor, software code-named Viridian that runs beneath the operating system and manages resources for multiple virtual machines. Novell's SuSE Linux Enterprise Server and Red Hat Enterprise Linux plan to make virtualisation a standard feature this year using the Xen hypervisor, but Viridian isn't expected to debut until after Longhorn Server.

In the past, Microsoft executives have said Viridian is unlikely to arrive with the initial version of Longhorn, adding that Microsoft makes significant service pack updates to its operating systems roughly 18 to 24 months after major releases. The implication was that Viridian would be likely to arrive in 2009 — possibly three years after the open source Xen made its mainstream debut.

But Neil winces at the 2009 date and hopes 2008 or even 2007 is on the cards because Viridian will slip in with no disturbances. When a software or hardware company qualifies its products for Longhorn Server, the software will be qualified to run either on Windows on bare metal or Windows on a hypervisor, he said.

"Longhorn Server will be virtualisation-ready," Neil said. "We're making sure Longhorn Server, as it ships, has all the changes we need for the virtual environment. We won't have to change the kernel or make dramatic changes to the environment."

Full Viridian scheduling details will come at a May conference for hardware engineers involved with Windows when Microsoft will "set ourselves in stone," he said.

Of course, meeting a schedule is another matter, and Microsoft has had an unflattering track record of late. In recent weeks Microsoft delayed Windows Vista and Office 2007, while the next version of Virtual Server was planned for 2006 but is now expected in 2007.

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Featured Talkback

So - if people can see the benefits from using virtualisation tools and approaches for consolidation (yes - I think that really is all we are talking about here!), does anyone think we are ready to finally wake up to the fact that we do not actually need to have a physical desktop at every desk? ... or, heaven forbid, that we can access our logical desktops remotely from practically anywhere?

By: Brian Murray

Read full story:
Virtualisation is a priority, say CIOs