By
Stephen Shankland
Wednesday, January 18 2006 09:48 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39305783,00.htm
A push is under way to endow Linux with a virtual partitioning technology
used by rival operating systems to make servers more efficient.
SWsoft is trying to get OpenVZ made part of the mainstream Linux kernel--the software
at the heart of the operating system--and a part of the major commercial Linux
versions, said Kirill Korotaev, a project manager at the Herndon, Va.-based
company.
In this, it has a major ally: Red Hat, the top seller of the open-source operating system, which plans to add the software
to its free Fedora
version of Linux for enthusiasts.
The companies' move to make OpenVZ partitioning standard in Linux is timely,
said Pund-IT analyst Charles King.
"I believe virtualization is a current or coming fact of life for every
information technology vendor," King said. "Vendors who figure out how to easily
integrate virtualization features into their solutions will have a leg-up on
competitors."
Over the years, new ways to carve a single server into separate sections have
been introduced. Such divisions make it easier to run multiple independent tasks
on a machine, keeping it gainfully employed instead of letting it idle through
operational lulls. That increase in efficiency means collections of
underutilized servers can be replaced with a smaller number of machines,
lowering administration and operation costs.
Many of the several ways to subdivide a server rely on virtualization, which
breaks the hard link between software and the lower-level software or hardware
on which it runs. The software's real foundation is replaced with a virtual one,
but the operating system or higher-level software thinks it's running on the
real thing.
Using its own take on virtualization, OpenVZ divides a single copy of Linux
so it appears to be several independent instances of the operating system, from
the perspective of higher-level software. Separate domains, called virtual
private servers, can be independently rebooted--though in reality, the
underlying operating system stays up and running.
OpenVZ's approach isn't new; the same process has been used elsewhere. For
example, Sun
Microsystems' Solaris was given a similar feature, called containers, when
version 10 was launched a year ago. Before that, developers added a related
technology, called "jails," to the FreeBSD version of Unix. IBM's Serge Hallyn has
been working on jails for Linux, a variation of BSD's jails.
And OpenVZ isn't even the first major virtual private server software project
for Linux. That position goes to Vserver, an open-source package that's used in
Positive Software's FreeVPS product.
But OpenVZ has the advantage over Vserver, said Illuminata analyst Gordon
Haff. "OpenVZ is an offshoot of a well-regarded commercial product that's used
by quite a few large hosting providers, so it's clearly the more mature," he
said. OpenVZ is an open-source underpinning to Virtuozzo, sold by SWsoft, the main backer of the Linux push.
Challenges ahead
One complicating factor to the acceptance of the OpenVZ virtual private
server is another technology, virtual machine software. Recently, servers using
x86 processors such as Intel's Xeon and Advanced Micro Devices' Opteron gained
new partitioning options through virtualization. First came VMware's virtual
machine software, which uses a hypervisor to let multiple independent operating
systems run on the same computer.
Now an open-source alternative to VMware is arriving, Xen,
whose hypervisor is developed by start-up XenSource
with support by major server makers and Linux suppliers.
Technically, Xen and OpenVZ are complementary; the first lets several
independent operating systems run on a server, while the second subdivides a
single instance. But in practice, their similar goals means there is some
overlap.
Indeed, Novell is focusing just on Xen and has no current plans to use either
OpenVZ or Vserver, said company spokesman Kevan Barney.
"Virtualization is the No. 1 customer request for our next generation of
Linux enterprise products. We're delivering the Xen 3.0 hypervisor as part of
Suse Linux Enterprise Server 10 this year," he said.
"We're constantly researching the virtualization space and will pick other
technologies if they meet the needs we've identified," he added. "At this time,
neither of these projects (OpenVZ or Vserver) has met our criteria."
But SWsoft hopes that OpenVZ will pick up backing from major distributors of
Linux versions, whose products typically use kernels with modifications not in
the mainline kernel Linus Torvalds releases.
"Our main goal is to be included in Suse
Linux and Red Hat
Enterprise Linux," Korotaev said.
Red Hat is a significant ally. "It's interesting to us. We're working with
them so they can get their software upstream and into Fedora," Leigh Day, a
spokeswoman for the Raleigh, N.C.-based Linux distributor, said. And the company
is helping with mainline kernel acceptance as well, she said. "There are some
kernel changes that need to be made to implement resource management."
But getting into the kernel will be a challenge. For one thing, Andrew
Morton, a top deputy to Torvalds, told CNET News.com he hasn't looked at OpenVZ
or Vserver.
Korotaev knows there is work to be done. "It's a long process. We need to
have a lot of conversations with Andrew Morton and Linus Torvalds," he said.
"I'm not sure it will be easy, because the concept of virtual private servers is
quite intrusive to the Linux kernel. The main problem is making clean code that
will community will accept."
Becoming open source
OpenVZ has always been governed by the General
Public License (GPL), but it didn't become a full-fledged open-source
project until last September. Outside help with the software can help steer it
in directions customers want and help programmers find bugs faster, Korotaev
said.
And unsurprisingly, there's a profit motive involved as well. "We hope to
drive more attention to Virtuozzo," Korotaev said. Virtuozzo adds tools for
tasks such as managing virtual private servers remotely, backing them up,
creating them or moving them from one computer to another without shutting them
down.
In the past, although source code was available to those who requested it, as
required by the GPL, SWsoft was reluctant to share, Korotaev said.
"There were some ideas about competitors, such as Vserver. We didn't want
them to access our code easily," Korotaev said. "Sure, they could get (source
code) if they bought Virtuozzo. But when our technology was only started, it was
important that our ideas wouldn't appear in another project."
The approach meant SWsoft staff "basically were violating the GPL by not
providing the source to their kernel modifications to their customers," said
Vserver project leader Herbert Poetzl.
However, Poetzl, who said he declined an offer from SWsoft to maintain
OpenVZ, welcomed the Linux push.
"I'm actually very happy that they started this project," Poetzl said. "The
competition leads to improvements on both sides, which in turn benefits the
customer."