By
Colin Barker
Wednesday, August 15 2007 09:43 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,62030849,00.htm
IT professionals could be forgiven for thinking there is only one virtualization supplier in the
market as Wall Street today prepares for an initial market listing of VMware, which is being touted by
some brokers as possibly the biggest new listing since
Google in 2004.
But VMware's rival XenSource is doing its best to
remind companies of its product lineup with the launch
of its latest enterprise-class virtualization product,
XenSource Enterprise v4.
Launched on Monday, version 4 is offering what
XenSource hopes is a "significant milestone in the
company's transition from a next-generation technology
leader to a provider of comprehensive enterprise-class
virtualization solutions", according to a company
statement.
With the Enterprise v4 product, XenSource is
targeting the same enterprise customers that VMware is
now targeting as both companies look to take
virtualization from the realm of departmental systems
into large cross-company deployments.
A key component from XenSource will be the 64-bit
hypervisor which, on paper, is one of the most
powerful available. It has the ability to address up
to 128GB of physical memory and a much larger number
of CPUs than has been available so far. Each virtual
machine can have 32GB of memory and support up to
eight CPUs.
Another feature designed to appeal to enterprise
customers is resource pooling, a must-have for
enterprise-class systems. Multiple physical systems
may be combined into a pool of virtual resources,
allowing virtual machines to be moved from one
physical resource to another, enabling greater
flexibility of systems.
That flexibility is one of the key benefits that
enterprises are now seeking from virtualization.
Enterprises typically want the ability to shift
resources around as quickly and easily as possible, as
requirements change.
Using version 4, XenSource says it is now possible
for systems managers to "drag and drop" virtual
machines into a pool of resources, with the pool
assigning the resources according to priorities set by
IT managers.
Another key new feature in XenSource is support for
a range of direct attached and shared storage
architectures for virtual machines, including virtual
disk images using NAS, iSCSI and SAN. Key to this is a
link-up with Symantec's Veritas Storage Foundation
product suite, which will now be included as an
integrated component within version 4.
XenSource's co-founder and chief technology
officer, Simon Crosby, believes that the link-up with
Symantec is a core feature for his company. "Through
Symantec we have access to all their test gear," he
told ZDNet Asia's sister site ZDNet UK.
Crosby believes that now is the right moment for
XenSource to make its mark in the enterprise market.
He believes the company has been able to enjoy living
in the shadow of VMware, as it has striven to "do
things better", he said. "We are definitely the better
product," said Crosby.
As he points out, the company has no operating
system agenda. "We work with Microsoft and Sun, for
example," Crosby said.
But XenSource is still a small company, claiming
500 paying customers and 5,000 production users as of
the end of the last quarter.
"The market is really looking for a credible number
two. We are that company," said Crosby.
XenSource Enterprise v4 will be released on 20
August, and it includes as standard features:
XenMotion, XenCenter, a 64-bit hypervisor and
XenAPI.
Pricing for XenSource Enterprise starts at US$1,599
(£799) for an annual subscription license per dual
socket server, and US$2,499 (£1,249) for a perpetual
license per dual socket server.
XenSource's midrange product, XenServer v4,
includes as standard features: XenCenter, a 64-bit
hypervisor and XenAPI. XenServer v4 does not include
XenMotion, but the previous limits on guest virtual
machines (VMs) and memory will be removed, the company
said.
XenServer will also now have the ability to manage
both Linux and Windows guest VMs. Pricing for
XenServer starts at US$495 (£247) for an annual
subscription license per dual socket server, and
US$750 (£375) for a perpetual license per dual socket
server.
XenExpress continues as a freely available download
from the XenSource site.