The VMworld conference starting today
in San Francisco will see a scrum-down between the major players in
virtualisation.
VMware will show off ESX
Server 3i, a slimmed-down hypervisor that is integrated with Flash memory
and will allow virtualisation to be deployed in “a matter of minutes”, the firm
claimed.
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“It’s our approach to on-demand and the main advantage is that it’s a turnkey
solution,” said Martin Niemer, VMware senior product manager. “You turn on the
server and it boots into the hypervisor. You only need to key in a username and
a password, and even that can be scripted.”
Niemer said there will be multiple firms that offer servers with the
capability from this year, including IBM, HP and Dell. IBM has already announced
details of its virtualisation-ready server, the x3950 M2, which embeds the
virtualisation capability on a 4GB USB internal Flash storage device.
Also on show will be Virtual Desktop Manager 2 for brokering connections so
that users can run applications as if they were local. The release, due later
this year, is based on recent acquisition Propero’s WorkSpace product.
“This is VMware taking the virtual desktop seriously,” said Tommy Armstrong,
enterprise desktop marketing manager. “You get all the control, security,
centralisation and provisioning with a familiar user interface. We’ve
abstracted the logic from the user and they don’t have to be IT-literate to use
the product.”
The release will set up yet more competition with Citrix Systems which b
illed virtualised desktops as a key reason for its recent decision to buy
XenSource.
VMware’s third big announcement at VMworld will be Site Recovery Manager for
automating planning and recovery from datacentre outages.
“It’s a workflow product that lets you have complete failover for a site
where you want certain virtual machines to be reactivated in a certain order of
priority,” said Niemer. “It’s a ‘red button’ product. In case of an outage, you
hit the red button.”
Another virtualisation vendor shaping up to offer a lower-cost alternative to
VMware is Virtual Iron which will today release version 4 of its enterprise
platform that is built on the Xen open-source hypervisor and promises simpler
tools for building, provisioning and managing virtual machines across many
physical servers. It also integrates with Suse Linux Enterprise Server.
SWsoft will release a beta-test version of
Virtuozzo 4.0, its
software for running multiple instances of the same operating system. The
upgrade, scheduled for commercial availability later this year, offers a
revamped user interface with templates and samples to accelerate deployment, and
support for real-time backups.
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