Red Hat targets VMware, Microsoft with virtualization line
By Elizabeth Montalbano
,
IDG News Service
, 02/23/2009
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Red Hat Monday introduced an entire line of virtualization software aimed at disrupting the current market and leader VMware's position
by giving customers an open source option for virtualizing their data centers.
The new line includes the built-in virtualization of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) OS as well as two virtual-machine management
products -- one for desktops and one for servers. Red Hat also is offering a stand-alone hypervisor called Red Hat Enterprise
Virtualization.
The new products also position Red Hat more solidly against Microsoft, which has a line of virtualization-enablement and management
technologies to accompany its popular Windows Server software.
Red Hat purchased Israel-based virtualization software vendor Qumranet last September and the new offerings are based on some
of the technology from that deal. They also represent a migration from the Xen hypervisor, on which Red Hat based the virtualization
included in RHEL 5, to the KVM (kernel-based virtual machine) hypervisor. KVM is based on the Linux kernel and is designed
for high performance and stability.
Red Hat will continue to support customers using the Xen virtualization software through the life cycle of the RHEL 5 OS,
which is until at least 2014, the company said. The KVM hypervisor will first appear in RHEL 5.4, the next version of RHEL
that is due for final release in the next few months. Red Hat released the current version of RHEL, RHEL 5.3, on Jan. 20.
Red Hat's virtualization line and news last week that Red Hat and competitor Microsoft will support customers running each other's virtualization software mean the heat is on market leader VMware, which had a
rocky 2008 with the sudden departure of President and CEO Diane Greene amid financial woes. She was replaced midyear by former
Microsoft executive Paul Maritz.
Microsoft and Citrix Systems also said Monday that they are working more closely together to compete better with VMware. Citrix plans to release a new
suite of virtualization management tools in April that will be offered for Microsoft's Hyper-V and its Citrix XenServer virtualization
software, the companies said.
Specifically, Red Hat's new product line includes the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Manager for Servers, Red Hat Enterprise
Virtualization Manager for Desktops, RHEL and the hypervisor.
The server virtualization manager product will provide a scalable, graphical user interface-based management system so enterprises
can manage every object in a virtualized environment, be it a user, an image or a virtual server, said Navin Thadani, senior
director of Red Hat's virtualization business.
Similarly, the desktop virtualization manager will allow enterprises to centrally manage, secure and enforce policies for
a virtual desktop environment without interrupting the user experience, Thadani said. The software takes advantage of a technology
called SolidlCE from Qumranet and the SPICE remote rendering technology.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Hypervisor is a small-footprint hypervisor that Thadani said would likely be most popular
with customers who have limited virtualization experience. He defended Red Hat's decision to offer another stand-alone hypervisor
to a market that already has several options of what is rapidly becoming a commodity technology, saying that Red Hat wants
to give customers choice for their different virtualization needs.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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