We have relaunched: What's new at ZDNet Asia?

Red Hat looks under Linux's hood

Summary

Red Hat has created a team of 34 programmers to work on nothing, but next-generation software.

Events

Microsoft MSDN/Developer Event
25 Mar 2010

One Marina Boulevard, Microsoft Singapore

IT Architect Regional Conference Singapore 2010
20 - 21 Apr 2010

Singapore Management University, Singapore

The Internet Show 2010
21-22 Apr 2010

Suntec Singapore

Trying to take a more active role in open-source programming, Red Hat has created a team of 34 programmers to work on nothing but next-generation software, the company plans to announce Tuesday.

The move is enabled by the Linux seller's surging profit and ensures the programmers will have time for the development instead of worrying about customer support requirements, said Brian Stevens, Red Hat's new chief technology officer. The company plans to double the team's size in the next nine months.

The team has several priorities, Stevens said: incorporating the Xen software to let a computer run several independent operating systems at the same time; improving the "stateless Linux" software to try to make desktop Linux a cost-effective option; and maturing programming tools such as the SystemTap probing software.

"We're building an emerging-technologies team," Stevens said. "There have been a lot of great ideas that we haven't been able to give an incubator environment to before."

The move signals a more active phase in Red Hat's engineering efforts, which generally have incorporated software changes once they've attained broad support among open-source programmers. Now the company is trying to rapidly respond to specific customer requests for its software, even if it has to work more on its own.

"In the past, Red Hat worked like most open-source companies: They wait for the developer community to arrive at a solution, get it working, and build momentum among users. Then Red Hat comes in and turns it into a supported package and distributes it," Ideas International analyst Tony Iams said. "What they're saying now is they're not necessarily going to wait until this shakes out."

Red Hat's profits and user base gives it the clout to pull off some of its development ambitions, even if the broader open-source community doesn't accept its approach or implementations, he added. Despite its savvy about open-source developer relationships, the company is unlikely to wait for consensus to build around its choice of Xen as a focus of work, for example. "It's hard to see how they're not going to be the heavy," Iams said.

Red Hat reported net income of $16.7 million in its most recent quarter and raised its estimates for future results. The company's gains in the Linux market, which stem chiefly from its flagship Red Hat Enterprise Linux product, contrast with the plight of its chief rival, Novell. That Waltham, Mass.-based company is expected to initiate layoffs and restructuring to try to trim expenses and improve its business prospects.

Unlike some companies, such as IBM and Novell, that sell both proprietary and open-source software, Red Hat works only on open-source projects. Thus it isn't likely that Xen management tools or other in-house development projects will become proprietary products from the Raleigh, N.C.-based company. Indeed, CEO Matthew Szulik argued last week that technology suppliers use proprietary software to keep a "knee on (the) throat" of their customers, against those clients' wishes.

Xen rising
Xen is designed to create several independent instances of an operating system, each called a virtual machine, on a server. Once virtual machines are built, they can be stored on a hard drive, duplicated or transferred to a different computer over a network.

The open-source software is one of several virtualization projects under way, the other main contenders being EMC's VMware and Microsoft's Virtual Server. All share the goal of making a server--and ultimately, a group of servers--run multiple jobs more efficiently.

Red Hat committed earlier to using Xen, but it now has formally pledged to incorporate the software into its next version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The company has said that version is due to arrive in late 2006.

Stevens described how Red Hat plans to charge for the software in the virtualized realm: It will permit customers to buy one subscription per server that permits them to run as many instances of RHEL as desired. Right now the company essentially sells multiple subscriptions for a server, but charges less.

"We don't think the way to monetize that value is charging per virtual machine," Stevens said. "If somebody is deploying software in a virtual environment, they'll start treating the use of a virtual machine as a precious commodity, if they have to start counting VMs."

Microsoft will let a customer run as many as four instances of its upcoming Windows Server 2003 R2 Enterprise Edition on a server at no extra charge. In addition, the top-end DataCenter edition of the successor to that product, code-named Longhorn Server, will permit unlimited versions to operate.

Xen is available in Fedora, a free version of Linux that Red Hat uses to try to quickly bring new technology to maturity. The company is considering making Xen run by default with the forthcoming Fedora Core 5, Stevens said. "It's a good way to get a lot of testing," he said.

Red Hat also is looking at higher-level management tools for Xen. The management tools would help customers to automatically install

Talkback

Add your opinion

In order to post a comment, you need to be registered. (Sign In or register below)

Post your comment
Transform your business interactions with real-time voice, video and telepresence solutions.
Tech Vendor: Cisco

ZDNet Asia Live

Zdnetasia.com Estimated Worth $178,365 USD. Daily Ad Revenue:$244 USD, Daily Views:81,445 Pages... - http://www.haplog.com/www.zdneta...

recently estimated website net worth of zdnetasia.com - http://www.haplog.com/www.zdneta...

8 hours 42 minutes ago by haplog on topsy

When I create an event, I click on an approximate time during the day when I want the event to occur, then I click "edit event detail...

23 hours 18 minutes ago by bessellbrowne on Google Calendar gets 'smart' rescheduling

ipads break alott i had one it broke three times in the month i had it so i got rid of the damn thing id just go for the laptop Top Grade...

23 hours 20 minutes ago by bessellbrowne on Report: 'Hundreds of thousands' of iPad preorders

There are a number of websites that still require Internet Explorer to view and IE for Mac Stinks (it is really ies4osx which is the Wind...

23 hours 22 minutes ago by bessellbrowne on Microsoft: Only minor tweaks in Windows 7 SP1

The receivers don't transmit back to the satellite. Unless there is a phone line attached to the receiver, they don't have any wa...

23 hours 25 minutes ago by bessellbrowne on Apple to join the geolocation craze?

What to expect from open source Symbian http://is.gd/aPIGL

23 hours 40 minutes ago by rebelk0de on topsy

"Lead Cognos BI Developer Insurance - Jobs - ZDNet Asia" http://bit.ly/bRcxOG

1 day 19 minutes ago by rhrcognos on topsy

whatever little understanding I have we 'll only progress toward end of the world if we use HPCs to lenthen life of human being. Huma...

1 day 31 minutes ago by abhi32002@gmail.com on High computing promises elixir of life

Thanks for the knowledgeable article on SDDs. Allas...when all this reasearch will happen in Indian Universities. Hope the new bill on Fo...

1 day 44 minutes ago by abhi32002@gmail.com on APAC HPC users eye solid-state drives

It was a good article. This brings a good opportunity for Indian IT firms to come up with new solutions in this field. HPC can become a b...

1 day 3 minutes ago by abhi32002@gmail.com on High computing most-wanted job in Asia

COL KR DHARMADHIKARY(RETD) its very late to reply the link, but if it is still alive and looking for opportunity, i would like to know th...

1 day 136826 seconds ago by deb021280 on Education takes off in rural India, helped by PCs

It was just a matter of time until google was marginalised anyway. I'm afraid this will be forgotten in China very quickly. Still, it...

1 day 5 minutes ago by robinsmith on Report: Google to leave China on April 10

High performance computing (HPC) most-wanted job in Asia http://bit.ly/9vFC3i (via @zdnetasia) #singapore

He doesn't care if her shoes are of glass, All he wants to see is a huge rack and nice a*s. Sleeping beauty's not awoken by true ...

1 day 34 minutes ago by warlowdavies on One pair of 3D glasses to rule them all

RT @zdnetasia: EMC COO, Pat Gelsinger, on bridging gaps in the organization and its cloud ambitions in Asia. (cont) http://tl.gd/i5jjd

EMC COO, Pat Gelsinger, on bridging gaps in the organization and its cloud ambitions in Asia. http://bit.ly/9etOZW

Asian SMBs need to pay more attention to disaster recovery planning http://bit.ly/bDet08 via @zdnetasia

Asian SMBs need to pay more attention to disaster recovery planning http://bit.ly/bDet08

[TECH] URL Shorteners slow Web redirection. - http://bit.ly/bySnWK @zdnetasia

URL shorteners are great but they can slow web redirection & you pray it would never go down http://bit.ly/bySnWK via @zdnetasia

Temasek Holdings eyeing tech stocks, indicating optimistic outlook on IT sector. http://bit.ly/aM7VwU

URL shorteners slow Web redirection. http://bit.ly/bySnWK

Chinese agencies cry foul over Google. http://bit.ly/by6rwV

Philippine antipiracy drive focuses on enterprises. http://bit.ly/aWryDC

Gartner: China to become world's fastest-growing enterprise software market. http://bit.ly/bqJTtb

all of sg's isps have been practising compulsory invisible proxy for all home subscribers at their backend since many years back alre...

2 days 44 minutes ago by melvinchia on Web filters mean bad news for business

it is not to good for china.
Proactol

2 days 29 minutes ago by nathonastle on Chinese ad partners beg Google for information

RT @zdnetasia: HP touts new products and management and productivity tools to address business computing pain points. http://bit.ly/dudgA6

For those with a computer science background, or interested in the high performance computing scene: http://bit.ly/9vFC3i

IT security insiders rob casinos of $50K http://is.gd/aPIKR

3 days 298827 seconds ago by rebelk0de on topsy

Very good explanation of JMX

3 days 34 minutes ago by Babith B on Managing applications with JMX

The reaction to a report issued Tuesday by Flurry Analytics managed to completely overlook some interesting news--the Android-based Motorola Droid outsold the original iPhone over the same period of time following their respective launches--to focus instead on the sales numbers for the Nexus One.

4 days 37 minutes ago by lonemavericks on diggs

Another ZTE story....

4 days 39 minutes ago by Moderate Your Greed on Philippines opens bid for final 3G license

We at www.fifosys.com have also seen a growth in IT outsourcing and anticipate it as a growing field.

4 days 13 minutes ago by sarah Jane on Companies' outsourcing spend to increase