I think the real issue is Xen and VMware are stepping stone.  KVM is
what you want to be using.  Due to the fact that KVM is really new.  I
don't think anyone should look at using KVM for production level use.
That does not mean you can't play with it.  Load up some admin
application to use in a KVM environment.  Because VMs are new to Unix
and other OSes.  I think the new research area for malware and other
exploits is in host VM systems and guest VMs.  Every thing I have seen
points to KVM being the VM winner.  The only issue is if Xen and
VMware start using the same processor hooks.  Only then, will things
start to get interesting.

IHMO

-Miller


On 2/26/07, silver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
More on virtualization & Linux.

Novell will not support KVM.

And Xen, like Novell, has remade themselves into an MS out-patient forever,
tethered by a life sustaining umbilical "partnership" cord...ala de Borg.

I find the virtualization evolution highly interesting and the article below
informative (I know it is from Cnet, but this one was still informative. ;-)

--------------
KVM steals virtualization spotlight
http://news.com.com/KVM+steals+virtualization+spotlight/2100-7344_3-6161804.html

Some excerpts...

KVM has "quickly drawn powerful allies--including Red Hat and Linux founder
Linus Torvalds"

The world was introduced to KVM "with an October 19 posting to the Linux
kernel mailing list. The patch updated Linux so that higher-level software
could take advantage of hardware virtualization features built into the
latest processors from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices. The result: Other
operating systems, including Microsoft Windows, can be "guests" running on a
Linux host foundation, on newer hardware."

"Unlike Xen additions to Linux, the KVM patch slipped nearly instantly into
the mainstream kernel maintained by Torvalds and a group of deputies."

"KVM could distract attention from Xen, which only made its commercial debut
in Novell's Suse Linux Enterprise Server last July and is slated to arrive
in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 with that product's March release."

"While Novell is interested in KVM, it has no intention of supporting more
than two virtualization technologies. One of those technologies would be at
a sub-operating system layer--as Xen is--and the other would
compartmentalize a single operating system, as OpenVZ does."

"Red Hat is warmer on KVM" and "contemplating splitting the upcoming Fedora
7 Linux for enthusiasts into two versions, one with Xen and the other with
KVM"

_______________________________________________
EUGLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.euglug.org/mailman/listinfo/euglug

_______________________________________________
EUGLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.euglug.org/mailman/listinfo/euglug

Reply via email to