Microsoft has today made the final
release version its long awaited Hyper-V server virtualisation software
available free for download from its website.
From 7th July, companies running Windows Server 2008 will have the
hypervisor, which allows one physical server to divide its system resources to
create multiple virtual machines (VMs), downloaded to their servers as part of
the operating system's automatic update facility.
As well as the Hyper-V hypervisor itself, Microsoft is also offering a
virtualisation planning tool and assessment kit to help organisations plan any
first move to server virtualisation technology.
Hyper-V was originally promised to ship in Windows Server 2008 in February
this year, though the OS release itself was delayed from 2007.
Other companies, including VMWare,
Red Hat,
Novell, Sun
Microsystems and Citrix have offered
server virtualisation hypervisors and management tools based either on their own
technology or the XenSource open source hypervisor for some time, leaving
Microsoft with a lot of catching up to do.
The established market leader VMware, which launched its first server
virtualisation product in 2001, already claims more than 100,000 customers
worldwide, as well as 14,000 industry partners that have certified their
applications to run on VMWare virtual machines.
VMWare may retain an edge on features and virtua machine performance, but
Microsoft will use the fact that Hyper-V will be available free and integrated
into its Windows Server 2008 operating system as its primary sales hook. This is
backed by links to its System Centre management suite which the company says
will make virtual machines easier to monitor and control.
“I think Hyper-V will initially co-exist [with VMWare], but with the
Microsoft Systems Centre virtual machine manager, organisations can manage their
virtual environments more efficiently and at a better price,” said Bill Laing
general manager for Microsoft’s Windows Server division. “Also, it is just
Windows so the IT team does not need to know two different environments”.
Though the majority of organisations that have already deployed
virtualisation have used VMWare, large numbers have yet to implement any form of
the technology and are now being pushed to do so by power consumption and
environmental concerns.
“There are strong themes around power saving as well as performance.
Customers typically run their servers under light loads, and virtualisation
allows them to take two machines and consolidate them into one,” said Laing.
A small number of UK customers have already made the move to using Hyper-V,
including oil company BP, though details were not available at the time of
writing. Roger Killick, an IT Manager at
Siemens
Standard Drives, the operational manufacturing unit of Siemens automation
and drives business based in Congleton, Cheshire is one.
“Virtualisation has helped us to improve availability by reducing the
dependencies on specific hardware, assisting with our disaster recovery plans,
and at the same time reducing our space and energy requirements,” he said in a
statement. “ The ongoing migration to Hyper-V on Windows 2008 Server Core is
also reducing the virtualisation support issues, by making virtualisation a
skill amongst the support team, rather than a specific role.”
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