By
Stephen Shankland
Monday, February 06 2006 04:48 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39310037,00.htm
Three companies selling software to let servers run software more
efficiently will try to advance their respective fortunes this week with new
software, a new partnership and a new promotion.
All three companies--Virtual Iron, SWsoft
and VMware--sell software designed to let computers run more efficiently by providing applications a virtual foundation instead of the real one the
applications think they're using. That virtual foundation means that a single
server can run more jobs at the same time and that the jobs can more easily be
moved from one computer to another.
As expected, market leader VMware
will make its GSX Server software free--and change its name to VMware
Server. The move is intended to show the company's software maturity and
advantages and let many more potential customers try it out, Chief Executive Diane Greene said.
"When you have something that's free out there, people try it a lot faster,"
Greene said. "Once (they) use it, they say, 'This is really good stuff,' and
they want to standardize on it."
VMware, based in Palo Alto, Calif., still charges for its higher-end ESX
server product, which is responsible for the bulk of the company's revenue
growth. ESX is often sold in conjunction with the company's management tools in
a package called the Virtual Infrastructure Node.
A basic advantage of virtualization is the ability to run multiple jobs
gracefully on a single server, a consolidation that cuts administrative expense
and electricity bills. At a higher level, it permits computer systems to become more
responsive to changing work priorities or hardware problems.
VMware pioneered the technology for running multiple "virtual machines," each
with its own operating system, on a single computer. But the days when the EMC
subsidiary had the market to itself are over. VMware Server is similar to
Microsoft's Virtual Server; open-source Xen,
while relatively immature and not available for Windows, reproduces the basic features of ESX server.
A New York conference, IDC's Virtualization Forum, is providing a good reason
for other rivals to try to win some attention.
Among them are start-up Virtual Iron a Lowell, Mass.-based company whose
software is designed not only to run multiple operating systems on one machine
but also to let a single operating system span several machines. The company
hopes its approach will lead to easily reconfigurable computing systems that
fluidly respond to changing work demands. The technology has been used in
mainframes for decades, but now is making its way to mainstream servers as well.
Virtual Iron's approach uses a technology called paravirtualization that
requires changes in the operating system. The company plans to announce that
Novell, the No. 2 Linux seller, now provides that support in a version of its Suse
Linux Enterprise Server product.
In addition, Virtual Iron won an endorsement from IBM, which said the
software is a good fit for its BladeCenter servers.
However, Virtual Iron is still getting started. The company has six
customers, a representative said, declining to reveal any names but saying they
are in the industries of financial services, aerospace, distribution and Web hosting.
Another company that already has several customers in the Web hosting
business is SWsoft, which sells a product called Virtuozzo that subdivides a
single copy of the operating system so different applications believe they have
a whole computer to themselves. Each of these partitions is called a virtual private server.
SWsoft released version 3.0 of its Linux product, which adds a feature called
Zero Downtime Migration that lets a virtual private server be moved from one
computer to another without shutting it down. Virtuozzo costs US$1,000 per processor.
Version 3 also adds support for Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 4.0. In addition, the Herndon, Va.-based company released
version 3.5.1 of Virtuozzo for Windows, which is faster than predecessors and
includes a feature that lets conventional server software be moved
to the virtual private server foundation.