Citrix Announces Agreement to Acquire XenSource 86
An anonymous reader writes "'Citrix has signed a definitive agreement to acquire XenSource a leader in enterprise-grade virtual infrastructure solutions. The acquisition moves Citrix into adjacent and fast growing datacenter and desktop virtualization markets.'
For nearly $500 million, including about $100 million of unvested options, Citrix would be purchasing VMWare's closest competitor in the server virtualization market, with XenEnterprise v4 offering technology similar to VMWare's flagship product — and arguably overtake them as a combined solution, as VMWare offers little in the realm of application and desktop virtualization. Though subject to the customary closing conditions, both boards of directors have approved the transaction, and the deal is expected to close in Q4 of 2007."
I hate Citrix (Score:3, Insightful)
On the plu
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I work with a Citrix/Server 2003 based network at a school and there have never been any problems with the connection to the servers. This is with half the kids on flash game sites or streaming video from mtv.com (good fun can be had shadowing them while they are on game sites :p).
I would say that your problems are with the IT department being clueless, or someone skimped on hardware are the servers are loaded too heavily.
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Last year, citrix was replaced with powerfuse, which was somewhat better, but everything is on the way of being replaced with dual boot windows w/ roaming profiles and suse10.2 (with the same AFS).
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a) were using a 486 in production a couple years ago
b) still use one
How much RAM does that monster have, 32MB? Maybe a high speed VESA Local Bus "Accelerated" video card?
Of course if your network is going down weekly that is another indication of problems that should not occur with a modern network/provider. Splurge on a $30/mo DSL backup if you are a remote site.
Citrix is an excellent way to provide
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Info on Xen's latest product (Score:2)
"XenSource has been in the news twice this week -- Monday they release a product [xensource.com], then Tuesday they get bought for $500m by Citrix. Here's Network World's take on the buyout [networkworld.com] and on the product [networkworld.com]. It looks like the product is packaging new releases of several of their components -- there's a 64-bit hypervisor version 3.1 that uses the Intel and AMD hardware tricks, APIs, management tools, and XenMotio
Xen not "closest competitor". (Score:5, Informative)
Xen is, of course, not VMWare's "closest competitor". Microsoft has over 25% of the market with their Virtual Server product. After that, Virtuozzo has the next largest deployment.
C//
You've been reading propaganda again (Score:4, Informative)
Virtuozzo isn't a server VM, it's an app VM.
VMWare and Xen are a bit different. VMWare has lots of depth and maturity. Xen has nearly similar compatibility but has fewer API sets to work with it. Xen's app hosting capabililities are more astute and highly competitive with Microsoft's SoftGrid and Citrix's remote apps. That's why Citrix bought them.
Virtuozzo has roots in site hosting, and it's maturity with Apache also extends to OpenVZ.
If by propaganda you mean using the products... (Score:3, Interesting)
We mostly use VMware ESX, which is really directed to IT departments. All of the tools assume central control. They work extremely well and reliably, as long as you're willing to stick with the centrally managed model. We've been using VMware Server on our development workstations to develop and test applications with specific images.
I've been using Amazon EC2, which is a Xen-based value-adding product, for external software testing and random on
Re:If by propaganda you mean using the products... (Score:4, Interesting)
Microsoft's VS seems to give a comfort level to homogeneous Microsoft 'houses'. Yet we've also seen it run Fedora seamlessly....although you can't get reasonable instrumentation without going to other stuff.
VMWare is nice, sexy, red, lipstick, and costs a fortune.
Yet Xen, while far better than early releases (ugly), seems to peak many interests in our web racks... for cost. Slick, it is not. But Citrix specializes in 'slick' and so we expect there to be interesting changes.
Unless you don't use Windows at all (and I'm not saying anyone does), the Microsoft VS will migrate onto Xen soon, too. Who'll win the race? Performance, price, reliability, in reverse order.
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In the IT department space, the key questions are a) does it do the job and b) are you willing to bet heavily on that it'll be around in ten years?
I left out Microsoft Virtual Server because everyone knows that unless you push the Microsoft products to the very upper edge of your stack, you're screwed with your pants on. I have nothing personal against them, I just have to take care of my employer's interests in the IT field first.
I'll bet you 10 t
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Of course, as Xen is opensource I expect the free software variants of xen management to grow at a fair pace (particularly fuelled by linux vendor interest).
Which rather begs the question; exactly what is Citrix paying $500M for, when they could use Xen for their own purposes anyway?
"Who'll win the race?"
Yeah, well, one thing's for sure; it wont be the stockholders in those companies at least. Virtualization may be a 'hot'
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Competition is fun.
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Virtuozzo's story is basically over.
*shrug*
They had 127% revenue growth last year. One may therefore conclude that rumors of their pending death may be exaggerated...
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Terminology may be a bit vague here. But as I see it, Virtuozzo is not application virtualization, it's operating system virtualization, like Solaris Containers, or like the original mainframe virtualization that started this stuff off 30 years ago.
And p.s., you don't have to "read the propaganda," as you put it, to know who VMWare's biggest competitor is: just ask VMWare, and they will tell you clearly: Microsoft.
Xen is hardly a competitor at all in data center s
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I would agree that Microsoft is VMWare's biggest competitor. Big guns. Connectix stuff is well matured and reincarnated, and Microsoft Systems Center VMM might be more than its other disconnected dirt at some point.
But your knowled
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I run one of those labs. We have a virtual data center prototyping lab with $1M in equipment and > 200 virtual machines of various different stripes. Xen is promising, q
Xen has all the pieces. (Score:2)
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We do have a terminology issue:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operating_system-leve l_virtualization [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_virtualiz ation [wikipedia.org]
Mind you, one might or might not consider wikipedia authoritative. I've seen OS virtualization most often used as described therein, but the term "app virtualization" I've found to be much murkier.
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Containers, sandboxes, and the like are operating system resources virtualization. Some have a greater degree of apparent instance autonomy than others.
Paravirtualized systems link a paravirtualized host OS with subsequent guest instances.
Direct translating systems are actually microkernels, sometimes loaded after a host OS instance that's replaced by
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They are?! That's not the signals I'm seeing from Red Hat. The Virtualization capability of RHEL5 is plastered all over their website and our sales/engineering reps have yet to say hold back on rolling it out.
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They are. They are saying wait for update 1, and saying it in public, at their conferences.
There are features in the RHEL5 hypervisor that, when invoked, can cause any varieties of bad behavior, up to and including the crashing of the hypervisor and the catastrophic loss of all virtual machines hosted by it. Amongst other things.
This situation isn't a surprise to anyone who knows Xen very well. Redhat took the open source Xen, including features in that open source release that the Xen Source auth
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Considering the price of ESX, it would be out-of-business hard to switch to it. Smart VPS hosts are using OpenVZ/Virtuozzo anyway.
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Not really, not. VPS hosts who want to run with the herd are running Virtuozzo. Smart VPS hosts know that while Xen is more hardware-hungry, it provides a better virtual environment for demanding customers who are willing to pay a little extra cash for better flexibility.
kvm (Score:1, Insightful)
kvm seems like the only free, general-purpose, straight forward sort of implementation.
Xen needs modified guests AFAIK, so Windows and others are out. VMware isn't free and has various issues because of that. kvm seems the obvious choice, although I understand it's still a work in progress.
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XenSource/Citrix, Virtual Iron, Red Hat, and Novell have invested millions in Xen, and for the sake of backwards compatibility they are now stuck with it.
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XenSource/Citrix, Virtual Iron, Red Hat, and Novell have invested millions in Xen, and for the sake of backwards compatibility they are now stuck with it.
You are wrong. Red Hat and others have invested in libvirt [libvirt.org] and all the virtualisation management tools they ship are based on libvirt. Libvirt supports [libvirt.org] Xen, QEMU and KVM, and will soon support OpenVZ too. There is also discussion about supporting VMWare.
Rich.
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QEMU only in the free version... (Score:2)
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It has such a low overhead you cannot compare to VMware/kvm full virtualization.
If you really want/need so, you can run full virtualization with Xen too (if you have the proper hardware extensions).
Now if you just want to toy with another OS, frankly, paravirtualization is not the most convenient way to do that. But if you're working with dozens of VMs distributed in a couple of servers, I think that paravirtualization is the way to go.
obligatory (Score:1)
Good news for Enterprise Quality Virtualization? (Score:1)
Nick.
Uhh... (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, no, not really. VMware has been doing quite a lot with VDI for a couple of years now. Really, they've pioneered it. It's Citrix that was trying to adapt and catch up in this field, as it threatened their traditional market. The purchase of XenSource goes a long way to help them compete in a market that VMware has been dominating.
In fact, I would go as far as saying that this purchase is primarily about Citrix keeping up with VMware in VDI.
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What do you mean by "graphics"? Are you talking about 3D games, or full motion
So... What does this mean for OSS? (Score:2)
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For some reason I thought Citrix was bought out by Microsoft, but I forgot it was that Microsoft only bought the rights to Citrix Metaframe and came up with Terminal Server using that software. And then that had a spat over Windows NT itself.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citrix#Microsoft_deal _and_early_relationship [wikipedia.org]
XEN Foundation (Score:1)
"Creating the Xen Foundation allows for even greater transparency and leadership independence than we have today, and will provide an organized forum for enabling the community of vendors and users that are building Xen into their businesses to influence the p
Not a problem (Score:1)
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First of all, Xen is its own operating system, it does not depend on Linux -- as does KVM, which is a part of Linux. They're both free software, which is great, but Xen does offer one to run a 'dom0' on NetBSD or OpenSolaris. For the latter alone, I could see Sun keeping Xen going -- even if XenSource
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More developers for VMware (Score:2)
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And they've been hiring people from Xen.
Can't wait to try it out! (Score:1)
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Darn (Score:2)
And the closest competitor to VMWare? While thats a nice gesture , i am pretty sure that Microsoft is currently #2 in the virtualization market.
What they're doing with the Free-Beer Version. (Score:2)
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If they're smart, they'll be more open with Xen (Score:4, Insightful)
Xen has a lot of potential. The basic virtualization capabilities are on par with VMWare or anybody else.
What Xen _really_ blows at is usability / manageability. Setting up Xen is a pain in the ass, especially if you're on something other than 32bit x86. Figuring out obscure command line options and text config file syntax won't take them very far.
XenSource has a closed source, functionally limited GUI management tool in their free (as in beer) XenExpress. It makes managing Xen VMs more realistic, but the limitations are too severe (maximum of 4 VMs, missing some features).
If they want to compete with VMWare, and fend off KVM, they'll need a lot more traction. They only way they'll get it is to start building the user-base.
They need to open source their management tools, and make Xen as easy to use as VMWare. Maybe they need to hold back a few enterprise-grade features, so that they can still sell product at the high end. But, the common linux users, and low-end business users could still be enticed away from VMWare, to a more open solution, if it was available. If they continue their half-open approach, they even compete with themselves, in Xen on Ubuntu/Suse/RedHat.
If they don't open up, VMWare continues to dominate. Microsoft's upcoming hypervisor expands to the strong number 2 option, and other wildcards might crop up.. KVM with a good mgmnt too.
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Maybe if you only use the Xen-provided tools, but that's not necessary the real-world usage scenario.
We use Debian on Xen on AMD64.
Converting a stock Debian Etch install to a Xen dom0 takes about 5 minutes, including the reboot. Creating a new domU takes about 2 m
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Sure, getting a Xen-capable Linux going is simple. In recent Linux distributions it's just a matter of selecting a couple packages for installation.
Installing client VMs (DomU in the really intuitive Xen nomenclature) can be easy, and can be a MAJOR pain in the ass.
Installing the trivial 'ttyli
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To be fair, that describes my situation. I am in Malaysia and the servers I administer are in the USA. With 300ms latency and 1-megabit DSL, using VMware's GUI tools over X or VNC is positively
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as for the management tools and overall openness, i can only agree. nowadays competition in many fields is only increasing, and projects/products have to compete for users. failing to do that successfully will push the project to some distant place while oth
Would Be Nice... (Score:2)