XenSource will
today ramp up its challenge to
VMware's ESX Server with an
update to its XenEnterprise virtualisation software, just as its larger rival
looks set to reap the financial benefits of a huge floatation.
XenEnterprise
v4 is designed to provide firms with an alternative to ESX, offering
scalability, a native 64bit hypervisor and 64bit guest support, and automated
pooling of server and storage resources. Other additions include live migration
of guest virtual machines to another host server, dynamic resource management
and the XenCenter virtualisation management console.
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XenSource argued that the release will also give customers an open
architecture and an alternative to VMware for partners in areas such as
management, backup and disaster recovery, as well as offering a lower price.
"Customers are worried about VMware creating the new Microsoft so they'll be
stuck in [VMware's] box forever," said Simon Crosby, XenSource chief technology
officer. "We want to be like [car manufacturer] Lexus and offer a high-end
product at mid-market price."
Red Hat and Novell Suse already fold Xen code into their respective
distributions, and XenSource recently signed an agreement with Symantec for the
security and storage giant to build storage management, data protection and
backup on Xen later this year. Also, XenSource is working closely with Microsoft
on a project called Enlightened Longhorn to ensure that
Windows Server
2008 is optimised for the code, despite Microsoft's plans to bring out its
own hypervisor next year.
However, VMware's market lead could be helped as early as this week when the
firm is due to float on the public markets with a valuation of about $10bn.
VMware also has the backing of a huge parent in storage giant EMC.
Some watchers believe XenSource is beginning to offer an interesting
alternative, however. "The feature set is getting closer to ESX," said James
Staten of Forrester Research. "Where they are still catching up is in the
maturity of its feature set, management suite and support infrastructure. None
of these will impede its use by the sophisticated users they have the ear of.
The non-early adopters will still wait for them to mature."
Jonathan Eunice of analyst firm Illuminate said XenSource is close to
achieving "essential feature parity" with ESX, but warned that this might have
an impact on cost. "Prices won't hit VMware levels but the gross feature
differences will no longer demand such an enormous delta in pricing," he added.
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