Archive for Open Source Xen
Xen on ARM 9 Processor=Xen on a PDA
Posted by: | CommentsThis video from Samsung shows Xen running on a PDA-type device. It shows how versatile the open source hypervisor is.
Citrix is Committed to Xen
Posted by: | CommentsThis is an interesting sequence of blog posts. Apparently, ZDNet interviewed Simon Crosby’s team and made the exact opposite conclusions than the Citrix team felt they had relayed.
IBM To Support Xen Virtualization Software For Suse 10 Linux
Posted by: | CommentsIBM support is a plus for Novell, which is getting Linux out the door with Xen ahead of its competitor, Red Hat. Both have announced support for Xen on their future Linux distributions.
Xen With Graphical User Interface On A Fedora 7 Desktop
Posted by: | CommentsThis guide shows how to set up Xen on a Fedora 7 desktop. Fedora’s virt-manager provides an easy to use GUI for setting up and managing your virtual machines. It does not have the extensive features like VMware Server, but the basics are in place.
Xen.org to release an Open Source Cloud Distribution: Citrix to Open Source XenServer Code
Posted by: ssnowden | Comments CommentsI recently had a really interesting call with Simon Crosby and Ian Pratt about a significant announcement that should impact many cloud computing decisions in the future.
Simon Crosby
Xen.org is set to release Xen Cloud Platform (XCP). XCP will provide essentially a ready-made set of federated open source cloud enabling projects under a single distribution to help accelerate organizations that want to deploy a private or hybrid cloud.
Press Release Quick Read:
A key focus of the XCP initiative will be to provide technology that permits easy interoperability between internal enterprise “private clouds” and leading external cloud platforms like Amazon EC2 and Rackspace Cloud Servers.
The Xen Cloud Platform will accelerate the development of a wide variety of key technologies and standards that address this need in an open, non-proprietary way, including:
Ian Pratt
virtual datacenters and disparate cloud service providers will be simplified. Standardized virtualization management – Support for DMTF standards will allow complete open management of virtual infrastructures.
Citrix to open source their code
I asked Simon about a detail he had mentioned during their initial comments to make sure I was understanding accurately. He confirmed that proprietary code that XenSource and Citrix developed as value-added features such as XenMotion, virtual switches and storage links will be part of the open-source code from Citrix that the XCP will have as part of the distribution.
My analysis: Why would Citrix open-source their code?
We discussed the the expected impact to Citrix and XenServer. Both Simon and Ian think that having a bigger footprint of XenServer is good for Citrix and ISVs in general because the XCP won’t necessarily be focused on the management layer, but the foundational components to having a stable, functioning cloud platform. After all, Citrix is already providing XenServer for free.
In fact, the orchestration and management capabilities of open source projects Eucalyptus and OpenNebula.org as well as commercial offerings from vendors and cloud providers will integrate with XCP since these projects are Xen-based already.
Simon said the plan is for Citrix Essentials to work with XCP, so this makes business sense to me. Citrix gets more XenServer in organizations that already are running Xen to power their clouds and have an opportunity to sell more Citrix Essentials.
Release Date
Ian said that the release is scheduled for Q409, but reminded me that open-source projects don’t necessarily adhere to firm release dates because of their community-dependent nature. Ian felt that it would be sooner than later however, because all of the components are already being used in production environments, so there shouldn’t be the version 1.0 mystery that most products have and its just packaging them together into a cohesive distribution.