By
Mike Ricciuti
Wednesday, June 08 2005 10:30 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39235262,00.htm
ORLANDO, Fla.--Microsoft gave more details Tuesday on its plans to launch
Windows-based "hypervisor" software for running multiple operating systems.
Bob Muglia, senior vice president in the Windows Server Division, said at
Microsoft's Tech Ed conference here that the software will be "built directly in
Windows and will allow companies to virtualize multiple operating systems."
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer first mentioned
the hypervisor plans in April at the company's Management Summit conference.
Such software lets multiple operating systems run on the same computer, a
feature that's useful for consolidating servers in order to save money, and for
extracting as much work as possible from a single system.
Muglia said the hypervisor software will be delivered in 2007, following the
debut of Longhorn Server. The new software will take advantage of virtualization technology coming from chipmakers Intel and Advanced
Micro Devices next year, Muglia said.
The software will differ from Microsoft's existing Virtual Server product,
Muglia said. That product runs on top of Windows and can run multiple Windows
sessions. A recent update to Virtual Server allows companies to run Linux and
other operating systems as well.
The new software will instead be built directly into Windows. "We will build
a thin hypervisor that sits on top of the hardware and virtualizes resources
like CPU and memory, so it has the ability to create OS sessions," Muglia
said.
"One of those sessions will have the virtualization stack built into it to do
device assignment and start and stop virtual sessions," he said. "It will have a
version of Windows but will typically be a stripped-down version. That will
control the other sessions, which can be Windows, Linux and anything that runs
on x86 hardware such as Solaris or Linux."
And what about the Mac OS, now that Apple Computer has said it will
begin using Intel chips? "It's impossible to say," Muglia said. Apple CEO
"Steve Jobs does not intend to allow the Mac OS to run on non-Mac hardware, so I
don't even know what that would mean at this point."
Microsoft hasn't decided how to package and sell the software. It could come
in a service pack release after the debut of Longhorn Server, Muglia said.
Microsoft's rival in this area is an open-source software package called Xen,
which has rapidly gained the support of Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, Novell, Red Hat,
Intel, AMD and IBM. Those companies have offered Xen support in the form of
endorsements, programming help and software contributions. Xen doesn't yet
support Windows, however.
In addition, VMWare recently expanded
the capabilities of its existing virtualization software. And IBM in February released
the source code for a project called Research Hypervisor, or rHype.
Muglia said virtualization software is relatively new, so the competitive
picture isn't yet complete. "It will grow in importance, but we're in the early
stages of use," he said.