‘Flavour of the month’ Xen primed for mainstream

The battle between Xen and VMware will move to virtualisation management, says analyst

Xen is flavour of the month in the tech world. Not only is the open-source technology supported in the new release of Novell’s Suse Enterprise Linux distribution, but Microsoft pledged to support Xen-virtualised Linux with its forthcoming Longhorn server virtualisation technology. And don’t forget about IBM.

Big Blue joined the Xen-fest this month, too, announcing that its low-end servers and middleware will support Xen, via the new Suse release.

The announcements move XenSource closer to the goal of having Xen 3.0 hypervisor on the majority of x86 hardware and operating systems, says Simon Crosby, XenSource CTO.

Sun has already committed to support Xen in its OpenSolaris operating system this year, and in Solaris in 2007. Red Hat says it will support Xen in its new Enterprise Linux 5 distribution, due out in December.

As Xen moves more into the mixed workload environment, however, it’s bumping into market incumbent VMware.

VMware vice president Brian Byun publicly dismissed XenSource’s tie-up with Microsoft as a “one-way street” that favours Microsoft. XenSource’s Crosby countered, calling VMware’s characterisation “the gut reaction from a wounded animal”,

Both technologies have advantages, according to Tony Iams, a senior analyst at Ideas International. Xen has open source credentials and performance benefits from para-virtualisation; VMware is a mature and tested technology and offers high availability and disaster recovery, he says.

Where is this all leading? Over time, all the virtualisation functionality provided by para-virtualisation and hypervisors will be standardised, Iams says.

At that point, the battle moves to virtualisation management, in which VMware has an early lead. But there will be a host of players vying for a slice of the virtualisation management pie, too. Look for server, systems management and open-source vendors, not to mention users with homegrown wares, Iams says.

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags VMwarevirtualisationxen

More about Big BlueIBM AustraliaIdeas InternationalLinuxMicrosoftNovellRed HatSuseVMware AustraliaXenSource

Show Comments
[]