Desperately Seeking Xen
AlexGr sends us to an excellent article on the state of Xen by Jeff Gould (Peerstone Research). He concludes that the virtualization technology has some maturing to do and will face increasing competition for the privilege of taking on VMWare. Quoting: "What's going on with Xen, the open source hypervisor that was supposed to give VMware a run for its money? I can't remember how many IT trade press articles, blog posts and vendor white papers I've read about Xen in the last few years... The vast majority of those articles — including a few I've written myself — take it as an article of faith that Xen's paravirtualizing technical approach and open source business model are inherently superior to the closed source alternatives from VMware or Microsoft."
My other account has a 3-digit UID.
While it might be nice if all these things are easy and work well for the hobby crowd, the real money in virtualization is in the enterprise space. Most servers in enterprise environments run 15% max and are refreshed every 3-5 years. The special processor matters less in that case, and the competition is between a mature VMWareESX server (not free), a hardware based IBM and Xen. Microsoft is a surprisingly minior player. VMWareESX server is very good for x86 consolidation and saves customers money, but is very expensive. It is still the best option for Intel based consolidation. Xen has deep penatration in enterprise lab environments. It is just getting the enterprise management tools to move into real production. IBM is very good at virtualization and stability, but on proprietary power and mainframe hardware. Xen will be fine, because the market is very immature, but expect more seamless and non-attrusive virtualization on the desktop.
I stopped reading the article with this quote:
Oh my. Editable XML configuration files, obscure command line interfaces, grayed out options in the GUI? Thanks, but no thanks. This thing doesn't sound like it's ready for prime time in Data Center USA.Are sysadmins at "Data Center USA" morons? "Oh nooo, command line time, I hate that. Oh nooo, my option I want is all grayed out! Help me, help me! Oh I am so sad now."
Deploying vm stuff is not the same as using a word processor. "Data Center USA" is in real trouble if their sysadmins aren't any smarter than regular desktop users.
Loose lips lose spit.