Just for clarification sake, Xen is now part of the Linux Foundation and 
XenServer itself is open source as well.

Pretty much all of the bits to generate the XenServer build and all development 
of the Citrix product are done on Github now.

I get the push to use KVM but given the amount of interest and use there was on 
CentOS 6 with Xen, I believe the effort will still be made to get it into 
CentOS 7, which is why it would be nice if it was upstream as well.

From: Nico Kadel-Garcia <[email protected]>
Sent: May 25, 2014 8:58 AM
To: Discussion about the virtualization on CentOS
Subject: Re: [CentOS-virt] Xen DomU supoprt in RHEL 7 and the CentOS Plan

On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 10:59 AM, Major Hayden <[email protected]> wrote:
> On May 23, 2014, at 9:13, Simon Rowe <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Why do you say that? My minimal testing of the rc doesn't show any
>> problems installing on Xen 4.4
>
> I had the same results as Simon.
>
> Running RHEL7rc as a domU on a machine running a Fedora-based Xen hypervisor 
> works fine.
>
> However, there is no Xen *dom0* support in RHEL7rc.  There are no tools 
> either.  Last time I checked, Xen support wasn't evenincluded with libvirt on 
> RHEL7rc. :/

Given Red Hat's focus on and direct freeware support of KVM, why
should they burn cycles on open source integration of a product that
has a closed source upstream vendor at Citrix? They'd be much better
off spending the engineering time on libvirt and getting the
NetworkManager configuration tools to correctly support KVM compatible
bridging or ordinary network pair bonding, jumbo frames, and VLAN
tagging. None of that was working correctly on CentOS 6 or RHEL 6
without hand editing config files, which would be overwritten and
scrambled by using NetworkManager to configure anything. I've not
spent time with the latest NetworkManager on the RHEL 7 betas, and
would be very curious to see if they've gotten *that* straightened
out.

In Red Hat's position, I'd contact Citrix and get *them* to do the
testing and debugging, which they'll need to do for their commercial
products, anyway. That might get into interesting open source
licensing issues, but it's a lot cheaper than replicating testing labs
and doing Citrix's work for them.
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