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Open Source Virtualization IT Linux

Xen To Become Linux Foundation Collaborative Project 62

jrepin writes "The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization dedicated to accelerating the growth of Linux, today announced the Xen Project is becoming a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project. Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects are independently funded software projects that harness the power of collaborative development to fuel innovation across industries and ecosystems. The Xen Project is an open source virtualization platform licensed under the GPLv2 with a similar governance structure to the Linux kernel. Designed from the start for cloud computing, the project has more than a decade of development and is being used by more than 10 million users. As the project experiences contributions from an increasingly diverse group of companies, it is looking to The Linux Foundation to be a neutral forum for providing guidance and facilitating a collaborative network."
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Xen To Become Linux Foundation Collaborative Project

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  • by skids ( 119237 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @04:52PM (#43455687) Homepage

    ...from my own anecdotal perspective, is that VMs are very often used as a way to isolate commercial software products into their own little box where they don't have to play nice with other applications on the box -- and which VM's are supported for these products depends entirely on the vendor. Major vendors who have these products are only just now beginning to think beyond VMWare, and when they do, they are thinking HyperV before Xen. Not many shops want to be supporting more than one virtualization suite -- the only reason they do is because some vendors demand VMWare for their crap, and the price difference between that and supporting a second suite is workable. Once the VMWare premium is out of the picture, because vendors went to HyperV, there will be less of a compelling reason to maintain support for a second suite.

    So closed source software vendors may dictate which suite wins between HyperV and Xen.

  • Re:Creamy Mayonnaise (Score:1, Interesting)

    by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @04:55PM (#43455725) Homepage Journal
    I think I know what is going on here... search engine gaming. If you search for "In a glass bowl, whisk together egg yolk and dry ingredients", you come across http://www.themiraclewhisk.com/recipe.html [themiraclewhisk.com]. I'm guessing this kind of garbage is used to rank these websites higher in the search engines
  • by stox ( 131684 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @05:03PM (#43455837) Homepage

    For some workloads, Xen outperforms kvm, and vice versa. It is better for us all to have competing open source solutions than competing against closed source solutions. Also worth noting, Yes Xen was pretty much dead in the water for some time, but since getting their act together and getting support in the mainline kernel, they have been doing very well.

  • Re:Wouldn't KVM... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RabidReindeer ( 2625839 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @05:09PM (#43455889)

    Wouldn't KVM be the most natural fit for a Linux virtualization project? Or are we talking about something other than Xen virtualization project here?

    Xen has been around longer, as I understand it, and at one time I used it in para-virtualization mode because running Linux VMs on the non-assist hardware I had at the time was very painful, performance-wise. I still have 1 VM host running para-virtualized.

    For a while it appeared that Red Hat - one of Xen's initial promoters - was going to drop Xen for KVM, but they seem to have been retreating from that. At any rate, recent RHEL kernels are easier for me to work with using Xen than KVM, for the most part. Don't take that as meaning much, however, since Xen is where I have a lot more practice.

  • by h4rr4r ( 612664 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @05:14PM (#43455931)

    Because no commercial software supports BSD?
    Hell, for a laugh one time try to explain to a vendor you want to chroot their commercial product.

    Those kinds of shit software are why we having all these workarounds.

  • by Burz ( 138833 ) on Monday April 15, 2013 @09:55PM (#43457797) Homepage Journal

    http://qubes-os.org/ [qubes-os.org]

    It gives you hardware-enforced security for your desktop.

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