Red Hat Open Sources SPICE Desktop Virtualization 79
laxl writes "Linux vendor Red Hat has open sourced the Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environment (SPICE) virtual desktop protocol it acquired last year with Qumranet, which used SPICE for its own commercial desktop-virtualization product, called SolidIce. SPICE can be used to deploy virtual desktops from a server out to remote computers, such as desktop PCs and thin-client devices. It is similar to other rendering protocols used for remote desktop management such as Microsoft's Remote Desktop Protocol or Citrix's Independent Computing Architecture. SPICE supports rendering virtual instances of Windows XP and Windows 7, as well as Red Hat Enterprise Linux. According to Red Hat, SPICE has advantages over other protocols in that it can dynamically customize desktop instances to fit specific operating environments. According to the article, most of the SPICE code is available under the GNU GPLv2, though parts are also licensed under LGPL- and BSD-styled licenses."
Dune (Score:5, Funny)
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I wonder what the CHOAM will think about this?
Better ask Paul. (see sig)
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Better ask Paul. (see sig)
Better call Saul [amctv.com].
Stop overloading common tech acronyms! (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, SPICE stands for "Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis" and is a circuit simulator.
(If this was a couple years ago, I'd rant that UML stands for "Unified Modeling Language" (not User-Mode-Linux), or that X stands for "X Window System" (Not MacOS 10))
Re:Stop overloading common tech acronyms! (Score:5, Funny)
He who controls the SPICE controls the universe. (Unless it's been open sourced)
Re:Stop overloading common tech acronyms! (Score:5, Funny)
He who controls the SPICE controls the universe. (Unless it's been open sourced)
He who controls root controls the universe. Then he who controls the SPICE only has the powers he's delegated.
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IF, and ONLY IF, there's sudo in the box. If not, then its one root to rule them all, and he who controls the SPICE can only do it within /home....
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My thoughts, in order: (I get /. feeds via my Google home page.)
"Holy shit, SPICE is open source now?"
"When did Red Hat buy SPICE?"
"Why would Red Hat buy SPICE?"
"Hopefully there's some documentation."
"Oh, they mean SPICE, not SPICE."
"Maybe I can post something like 'as an EE, fuck you for getting my hopes up'."
"Aw, Octorian's posted about SPICE."
"Fucking Slashdot."
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So, would this be a bad time to introduce my newly designed thin-client PC called the "Generic Network Unit" (GNU) and my new programming language for thin client computer graphics, the "GNU Graphics Programming Language" (GNU GPL)?
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That depends. Will it have a Special Purpose Internet Connection Enhancement?
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How did you know?
Don't forget about the Enhanced Memory Acceleration Circuitry System (EMACS). That's one of the GNU's best features!
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This was the first thing I thought of too.
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I agree that it's annoying, though in my experience people never refer to SPICE without prefacing it with "Berkeley". SPICE all by itself is used as a generic term.
TFA could also use some more references. It sounds intriguing, but I've been around long enough to be distrustful of what's in press releases.
Re:Stop overloading common tech acronyms! (Score:4, Insightful)
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To MIB, "Orion" is a cat.
Two for the price of one joke. :)
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Yeah, and while we're at it, NASA: "Orion" means exploding nukes under a blast plate, not providing a cushy crew cabin. :)
I enjoy when the names they pick have myths that somewhat match the goals of the project.
So for the original 'Orion' would Hephaestus have been more appropriate? What's a good myth for 'Lighting a fire under your ass'?
Project 'Wan Hu'?
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no, SPICE is someone's idea of a clever attempt at manufacturing a cool-sounding acronym based on an extremely short and common word (the only one that's shorter and more common might be ICE, which this is derived from).
No one can claim ownership on such a stupid, short, generic acronym. There are at least 20,000 meanings of "ICE", and adding "SP" on the front does not make you special or original. They're both lame, get over it.
This is not nearly as bad as Microsoft calling its product "Windows", or Google
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the only one that's shorter and more common might be ICE, which this is derived from
Really? I thought it was derived from aromatic herbs.
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I have yet to see worse than overloading IP to mean both "Internet Protocol" and "Intellectual Property". Now that's confusing.
--- Mr. DOS
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RMS = Richard Stallman [stallman.org] - Mister Free Software himself
RMS = Windows Rights Management Services [wikipedia.org] - Microsoft's proprietary system for restricting access to documents
acronyms and abbreviations (Score:2)
Although SPICE could be a legitimate acronym, neither UML nor X would be acronyms, they would be abbreviations.
Examples of acronyms; radar - RAdio Detecting And Ranging, sonar - SOunt NAvagation Ranging Examples of abbreviations; IBM, XML
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exactly my first thought... you'd think there would be some originality with FLAs* that you can't really get with TLAs*@...
* Five Letter Acronyms
*@ Three Letter Acronyms
But how many (Score:2)
Isn't this different from RDP or ICA which are pretty much supported everywhere?
VDI here we come (Score:2, Insightful)
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SPICE is a circuit simulator (Score:2, Insightful)
Why would they take the name of an existing well-known software program?
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Arrogance? Ignorance? Pick one.
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I don't know the fuss about it, I am a IT professional, did some exercises with SPICE (circuit) while in the university and now SPICE (VM) may be interesting for my job as sysadmin. As a sysadmin, I do not need to design circuits anymore, so I don't think I will be ever confused.
Of course, my apologies if your post was just a joke...
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Re:SPICE is a circuit simulator (Score:5, Funny)
What about places that might have a need for both SPICEs?
They will need a SPICE rack.
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Oh, in a month they'll change it to FireSPICE.
Very cool I think. (Score:3, Informative)
I currently use NXClient w/Neatx for that kind of remote access/management. It works well with both Linux and Windows backends.
I guess the difference is accessing various os's with a single protocol rather than using NX & RDP (like the NXclient does) + also possibly getting around some of the builtin limitations (available only on certain flavors of Windows, limited # accesses by default etc) of RDP.
Sounds interesting if the performance is decent.
So what the FUCK does it do? (Score:2)
I've seen a dozen blog posts in my reader about this, and I have been unable to far to figure out WTF that thing is supposed to do. Is it a remote display protocol? If so, how does it differ from RDP or NX?
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If so, how does it differ from RDP or NX?
It seems to be better [spice-space.org]
Graphic commands - processes and transmits 2D graphic commands
Video streaming - heuristically identifies video streams and transmits M-JPEG video streams
Image compression - offers verios compression algorithm that were built specifically for Spice, including QUIC (based on SFALIC), LZ, GLZ (history-based global dictionary), and auto (heuristic compression choice per image)
Hardware cursor - processes and transmits cursor-specific commands
Image, pa
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It's more Citrix than RDP or NX. You have a Linux server with multiple qemu/kvm instances, each of which are accessed from a client (Linux/Windows).
The advantage is that you can have multiple clients on a single server, push CPU/GPU-intensive display operations to the client and have access to client-side hardware from within the virtualized server instance.
Normally I'd add a RTFA-sneer, but I read through the site and am only moderat
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more than 1 screen? (Score:2)
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Sun's SunRay clients can support multiple monitors, I've seen over 4 monitors on their system.
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Sunray's cap at 16
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And Citrix XenApp does multiples fine - up to 8, I think.
I attended a RHEL conference (Score:2)
where they demoed this and other VM technologies. I think that RH has some really interesting VM Management stuff in the pipeline. The nice thing about SPICE is your browser is the client.
Platform independence depends on implementation (Score:3, Interesting)
From the summary:
(Emphasis mine). Aha, so it's platform independent? And they support... Two! *badum-ching* operating systems: Windows and Linux. Compare that to VNC, of which it is hard to find an OS that doesn't support it.
Er? Wait a minute (Score:2)
If its Open source then what is to stop you from taking said source and compiling it for your chosen platform?
Nowt methinks.
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VNC is definitely not in the same league as SPICE. SPICE more directly compares with and competes with Citrix and MS Terminal Server. It not only ports the display, it can port individual apps, connects drives and printers, and is capable of doing fancy graphical things like movie playback in a way that's much more optimal and efficient than VNC can do. SPICE might compare in some measure to NX, but NX is really about optimizing an X11 command stream, which is only an X11 thing, so it's of more limited u
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Hey, VCN is a pretty good program.
Red Hat == "GOOD GUYS!" (Score:5, Insightful)
This is yet another example of too many to name, of Red Hat being an all-around bunch of warm and fuzzy penguins, guys! And this is so typical of them: buy a proprietary product, and as soon as they decide to do something with it, they open source it first!
RedHat has NEVER deviated from their policy of releasing SRPMS for all their stuff. You can very literally roll your own distro simply by taking their SRPM and compiling them! And a number of groups have done just that: White Box Linux [whiteboxlinux.org], CentOS [centos.org] and Scientific Linux [scientificlinux.org].
Red Hat employs some of the most prolific contributors to the Linux Kernel and is a vital force in making Linux what it is today. Go Red Hat!
PS: No, I don't work for them, just a very happy customer!
SPICE? (Score:3, Funny)
The VDI Protocol Wars (Score:3, Informative)
This is not a bad thing. For years, the only alternatives for virtual desktops were either proprietary (ICA comes to mind) or OS-dependent (Sun ALP, MSFT RDP, X, NX), leaving VNC as the only OS-independent option. VNC was (and still is) great, but let's face it, it was never intended to be used for real massive VDI-type deployments, even over the WAN. SPICE is supposed to have a good LAN performance, but still doesn't quite cut it for long latencies over the WAN. May be with this move, SPICE can be improved to also address those use cases.
For now, the most advanced thing I've seen is Teradici's PCoIP protocol that works really well in any environment, and they licensed it to VMware to be used in the new View 4 product line as a pure software implementation (as a disclaimer, I work for VMware, but PCoIP blew my mind way before we did anything with them).
In any case, 2010 is shaping to be the year of the virtual desktop, and competition is a good thing!
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Too bad vmware decided not to compete for my business. No management from a linux box means I am not buying it.
Any idea if they will ever fix that little oversight?
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h4rr4r, I would love to comment on this, but I'm under NDA rules... in any case, I can say a lot of very interesting thing are coming from VMware in 2010 that will show there is still a lot of room for innovation in this field.
I encourage you to reach out to your VMware Systems Engineer and ask for an NDA Roadmap for the Management products. You'll leave that meeting with a smile, and the same warm and cozy feeling you get after having some nice pasta... ;-)
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Can you back up that statement with something solid, or are you just being a nice VMware employee and FUDing the competition before it gets chance to eat your lunch?
I'd rather they fixed Windows guest support (Score:2)
I'd rather they fixed Windows guest support. I've tried it (in Ubuntu Karmic), and it's horrible if you want to run Windows in it (both XP and Win7). Very slow, timer lags behind, network and disk throughput are super slow even with virtio guest drivers. Linux runs fine as a guest on the same box.
I guess it's unfair to _demand_ anything if something cost you zero dollars (gifted horse thing and all), but VMWare ESX and HyperV Server also cost zero dollars these days, and they both run Windows just fine.
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I am running several Windows machines in kvm, what kind of hardware were you using?
Server 2008 seems to running very fast and the clock is just fine. None of those no-cost options offer live migrate or many other features.
Brian Madden's test results for ICA, RDP, SPICE (Score:1)