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Cloud Microsoft Linux Technology

Linux Usage on Azure Has Surpassed Windows, Microsoft Developer Reveals (zdnet.com) 83

An anonymous reader shares a report: Three and a half years ago, Mark Russinovich, Azure CTO, Microsoft's cloud, said, "One in four [Azure] instances are Linux." Next, in 2017, Microsoft revealed that 40% of Azure virtual machines (VM) were Linux-based. Then in the fall of 2018, Scott Guthrie, Microsoft's executive VP of the cloud and enterprise group, told me in an exclusive interview, "About half Azure VMs are Linux". Now, Sasha Levin, Microsoft Linux kernel developer, in a request that Microsoft be allowed to join a Linux security list, revealed that "the Linux usage on our cloud has surpassed Windows." Shocking you say? Not really. Linux is largely what runs enterprise computing both on in-house servers and on the cloud. Windows Server has been declining for years. In the most recent IDC Worldwide Operating Systems and Subsystems Market Shares report covering 2017, Linux had 68% of the market. Its share has only increased since then.
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Linux Usage on Azure Has Surpassed Windows, Microsoft Developer Reveals

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  • Netcraft confirms it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by amorsen ( 7485 ) <benny+slashdot@amorsen.dk> on Monday July 01, 2019 @11:23AM (#58855466)

    Windows is dying.

    According to the June 2019 webserver survey [netcraft.com], Microsoft now has a 6% marketshare among active sites.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Website market share isn't really a good barometer though. Public web server has never really been the strongest use case for Windows Server in the enterprise.
      • This! You can almost guarantee that for all those non-Windows webservers, there's a venerable army of Windows Exchange Servers, Active Directory Servers, Sharepoint Servers, Skype Servers, and what not else supporting the many thousands of windows clients behind it.
        My own company is a Windows shop, so much so that we're all cloudy to the point where if I lock myself out of my PC I just need to reset my Office365 password, all my files are on Sharepoint, and I only ever talk to coworkers using Teams. Yet a l

        • If you're still stuck with Exchange I feel bad for you son, I got 99 problems but email ain't one.

        • This! You can almost guarantee that for all those non-Windows webservers, there's a vulnerable army of Windows Exchange Servers, Active Directory Servers, Sharepoint Servers, Skype Servers, and what not else supporting the many thousands of windows clients behind it.

          FTFY :)

    • i myself found more interesting how for the first time nginx now has more users than apache.

      netcraft confirms it, apache is getting clobbered

  • Not suprising at all (Score:5, Interesting)

    by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @11:33AM (#58855540)
    Cloud software (stuff like SaaS applications, IoT back ends, multiplayer game servers, and mobile app back ends) are almost exclusively running on Linux, and these are some of the biggest customers of cloud providers like Google, AWS, and Azure. Additionally corporate development is moving to Linux with, in part thanks to the the growing talent pool of both developers and DevOps engineers who can work in Linux. Cost savings are substantial and things like orchestration and automation along with containerization makes it easy to scale. You can do some of the same work on Windows Server but why? Especially with the popularity of Java and other agnostic languages.

    But don't get too excited, this still isn't the year of the Linux desktop.
    • by edis ( 266347 )

      Can you compare industrial stability of the Linux to the Windows Server, really? So, you do not gamble, when you are serious.
      Where one does use Windows Server, is internal infrastructure, boxes running popular software, internal file sharing, serving Windows clients, equipped with MS Office. Damn standard business infrastructure (made of vaguely business grade software).
      Departing into the cloud, Linux can be (and apparently is) well preferred, if capable to deliver principally.

  • It would interesting to know how many of these VMs are RHEL. Since IBM now owns Red Hat that would mean that IBM and Microsoft are sleeping with each other again . . . years after their messy divorce over OS/2 back in the 80's.

    For some reason, I find that thought to be more than mildly amusing.

    • For some reason, I find that thought to be more than mildly amusing.

      Immortal people can't afford to truly burn bridges. They'll always run into their ex's again eventually.

      Remember kids, groups of people are magically people too!

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @11:50AM (#58855646)

    With Linux you can scale up much faster, because you don't need to go to purchasing, and legal when you exceed your licenses. As well, if you need to trim down your services, you are not leaving money on the table having unused licenses. As most companies are just riding the current fad, Investing into an OS puts you at a disadvantage.

    Now an other key thing, if you are investing into Windows Server, you are probably also getting SQL Server, and other MS tools all setup and configured to run locally, and you will not necessarily have the need for Azure, if you have already payed thousands of dollars for an IT infrastructure to run Windows Server.

       

    • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @12:21PM (#58855858)

      not necessarily, many software mandate running on Red Hat or SLES, and you must pay if you want to access repositories for updates and be supported.

      That said, with some of those distros you can license per physical hosts, and spin up as many virtual hosts as you want.

      On Microsoft's cloud, last when I looked, Linux for 2 cpu VM was 27% cheaper than windows.

    • With Linux you can scale up much faster, because you don't need to go to purchasing, and legal when you exceed your licenses.

      Irrelevant comparison because Azure is Microsoft's cloud service and therefore you don't pay separately for Windows or SQL licensing. If you pick a Windows host for your service then the license cost is already built into the cost of the host. MS prices the Linux and Windows hosts identically.

  • Not surprising... I've been doing a bunch of cloud work on Azure in the last 6 months and every service we're running that's capable of being cross-platform runs approximately 50% faster on the Linux-provisioned resources instead of the Windows-provisioned resources. I've rate-tested each of them to verify. Mostly it's not in the compute time, it's in the time it takes for the service to startup or auto-scale.

    When you're paying for metered services or care about time-to-complete, why wouldn't you opt for the faster Linux offering?

    The only stuff we have in Azure running on Windows-based services is a couple of .Net webapps that I strongly doubt have been safely written to be cross-platform.

  • by geekymachoman ( 1261484 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @12:41PM (#58856004)
    And this is one of the reasons why MS is pretending to love Linux now, contributing to it, etc.

    Tried to kill it, failed... if you can't beat them, join them.

    Good news though.
  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Monday July 01, 2019 @01:36PM (#58856278) Homepage Journal

    Most metrics quoted are for total sales dollars.

    This shortchanges the bulk of Linux, which is blade computers used by hundreds of users, but which are much cheaper than most single user Windows workstations.

    When you aren't wasting most of your purchase price on things you don't need, your price drops.

    So, yes, it can both be true, as Microsoft says, that they have the majority of computer purchases (in dollar amounts), and it can also be true, that the majority of users are using Linux.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Most metrics quoted are for total sales dollars.

      Oracle is going to sell one license and knock everyone else off the charts.

  • I produced and hosted TVLinux for 5 years (2003-2008) and I predicted that Linux would replace Windows in the server area on my show. At the end of every show I discussed with "Bill" that Linux is better than Windows.
  • by sad_ ( 7868 )

    god, the idea alone of running windows in the cloud, gives me shivers.

  • Nelson Muntz sends his regards

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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