Friday, November 25, 2011

Redhat Virtualisation 3.0 Beta released.

Redhat has released virtualisation 3.0 in beta version this is considered to be a end to end virtualisation solution with new capabilites for server virtualisation and desktop virualisation.

Kernel based virtual machines aka KVM is the technology used for it and this has been introduced to Open virtualisation alliance as an alternative to proprietary solutions. Redhat and BMC are working together on BMC cloud and virtualisation solution with Redhat virtualisation 3.0 for their joint customers. Redhat and Netapps are working together to provide storage solutions.


Key features as described by redhat's website is
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 3.0 previews several key enhancements, including:
  • Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Manager is now a Java application running on JBoss Enterprise Application Platform on Red Hat Enterprise Linux
  • An updated KVM hypervisor based on the latest Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
  • Industry-leading performance and scalability levels, supporting up to 128 logical CPUs and 2TB memory for hosts, and up to 64 vCPUs and 2TB memory for guests.
  • A power user portal that allows end users to provision virtual machines, define templates and administer their own environments
  • A RESTful API that allows all aspects of Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization to be managed and configured programmatically
  • New multi-level administrative capabilities, improving product functionality for very large deployments
  • New local storage capabilities
  • An integrated and embedded reporting engine allowing for analysis of historic usage trends and utilization reports
  • SPICE WAN optimization and enhanced performance including dynamic compression and automatic tuning of desktop effects and color depth.  The new version of SPICE also features enhanced support for Linux desktops.

Monday, September 28, 2009

VMinformer a security tool for vmware

VMinformer a security tool for vmware.

A london based company into design and to build applications to compliment and integrate with virtual enviornments.

VMinformer is has four main features

  • Assess
    Monitor the security of your virtual environment
  • Secure
    Identify key security issues with step by step fix guidance
  • Comply
    Adhere to PCI and SOX requirements
  • Report
    Clear concise security view of your virtual environment
Free trial download is available.
Download

Sunday, August 23, 2009

SpringSource is accusitioned by VMWARE.

VMware Got What It Paid For: A Vision Of The Future

Posted by Charles Babcock, Aug 13, 2009 09:30 PM

VMware's acquisition of SpringSource is not a match made in heaven. It's going to take an effort by both parties to make this marriage work. Still, it looks like one of the few responses VMware could make to counterMicrosoft (NSDQ: MSFT)'s dangerous invasion of its turf.

These thoughts were prompted by an exchange with Salil Deshpande, a general partner of on the three largest investors in SpringSource, Bay Partners. "I don’t think VMware can remain simply a virtualization vendor. Virtualization is just table-stakes, at this point," he wrote in an email response to my query on why VMware was making its $362 million investment.

Deshpande didn't mention Microsoft and he has no special knowledge of VMware's intentions. But with Microsoft offering Hyper-V as a feature of the operating system, what, in the long run, was VMware supposed to do? Stand by and watch its $1.3 billion virtualization empire get commoditized? How could it take advantage of current computing trends and ward off an incipient invasion of its customer base?

One answer is to harness virtualization to a larger and higher purpose, one that might be difficult for Microsoft to match. It took its first steps in that direction with vSphere 4, a re-orientation of its product line from managing a local center of virtualization, its Virtual Center, into creating a data center operating system that would manage the majority of resources.

Managing virtual machines themselves is supposedly the big thing right now, but that's something of a mis-statement. Running applications effectively on virtual machines is the big thing, and VMware customers run a heavy percentage of Windows applications on their ESX Server virtual machines.

Microsoft's growth in the data center has been impressive, in part, because of the growing power of the x86 servers, thanks to multi-core processors, and the expanding legions of application programmers familiar with Windows Server.

In looking around for an alternative, it seems logical that VMware would gravitate to Rod Johnson and SpringSource, since Johnson is one of the few people who has understood that Java could be made simpler to use. Too many Java advocates love their complexity. Johnson himself has said he had to get out of the mindset of the Java programmer to see where it was going wrong, how it could be made easier to use.

In the future two new things will be required of applications that will give Java apps a continued, major role in the enterprise: they will need to be broken up into services and spread across many servers. Java applications lend themselves to running in multiple process threads, suitable for multi-core chips and multiple servers, taking advantage of a trend that yields high performance.

In addition, the workload will need to be split between 1) the part running in a bare-bones data center that hums along furiously close to 100% capacity much of the time, and 2)the part that gets exported to the external cloud, which picks up the slack.

Java, or a combination of Java and one of the modern dynamic languages, can do this as well. The scripting language communicates upfront with the public cloud and tells it what's needed, setting up the core Java business logic.

SpringSource is one of the few companies that has had an appetite to pull these two attributes together, lightweight Java development and the flexibility and Web-worthiness of the scripting language.

VMware officials, wary of the looming Microsoft presence and eager to find a way to counter it, must have been intrigued by SpringSource's ability to keep grafting new capabilities onto what it had already accomplished.

Maybe VMware paid too much, as a few skeptics have said. But sometimes maintaining your ability to see into the future and navigate its shoals is worth a little extra.

"Cloud computing will be too pervasive and too important for VMware to remain only a virtualization vendor. It needs to do more. It needs to make many moves such as the SpringSource one. I think they will," said Bay Partners' Deshpande.

Friday, August 21, 2009

E-book on virtualisation for dummies


SUN email subscribers were provided with a e-book on virtualisation for dummies.
Dummies is age old and they keep the humour intact and this e-book is good for freshers and even for experts as it would help them to explain the concepts to a layman.

Virtualisation for dummies

Thursday, April 9, 2009

A very good link on Virtualisation

A very good link on virtualisation.


there is so much to it and there is also a webinar.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Project on virtualisation of 450 servers

There is a project on virtualisation of about 450 servers of which there are windows and linux servers.windows servers to be virtualised are of windows 2000 server and windows 2003 server, linux of redhat ......

which are the best tools for it ?

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Tools for Virtualisation - Virtualbox

Tools for Virtualisation - Virtualbox


Virtualbox is a set of tools from SUN which is under open license and works on a series of paltforms which includes Windows,Linux,Solaris,Freebsd

Virtualbox alongwith its source,binaries,documentation can be downloaded from the site http://www.virtualbox.org/

here are some screenshots on virtualbox
http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Screenshots

Virtualbox software development kit can be downloaded from
http://dlc.sun.com/virtualbox/vboxsdkdownload.html#sdk