Welcome | Sign In
TechNewsWorld.com
Virtualization

New Version of Xen Hypervisor Hits the Streets

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
New Version of Xen Hypervisor Hits the Streets

The newest version of the open source Xen hypervisor has been released, and it features input from some of the industry's largest hardware and software players. The new release boasts better performance and scalability and is designed to work on supercomputers, smartphones and everything in between.


Xen.org, the developer of the open source Xen project, on Wednesday announced the release of the Xen 3.3 hypervisor engine. The product is the result of a distributed development effort by senior engineers from more than 50 leading hardware, software and security vendors.

Xen 3.3 includes enhancements that further advance its position as a fast, scalable and secure virtualization engine for a broad range of server and PC chipsets from supercomputers to PDAs.

"We've clearly benefited from the strong vendor support community behind Xen. The hypervisor is well ahead of anything else," Ian Pratt, founder of Xen.org, told LinuxInsider.

This latest upgrade benefited from contributions from Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), AMD (NYSE: AMD), HP (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Red Hat (NYSE: RHT), Sun Microsystems, Fujitsu and Novell (Nasdaq: NOVL). Further, Xen is well on track for shipping as an embedded option on more than half of the server virtualization hardware released in 2008.

Feature Packed

The new Xen 3.3 release provides users with numerous advanced features and designs that improve overall performance of the hypervisor engine in mainstream enterprise computing environments. For example, Intel's continued contribution to the Xen project is driving parallel advances in hardware and software virtualization capabilities. This ensures that Xen-based solutions take full advantage of next-generation microprocessor technologies, said Pratt.

"At Intel, we continue to enable Xen to take advantage of the advancements in Intel Virtualization Technologies and other platform capabilities," said Imad Sousou, director of Intel's Open Source Technology Center. "Xen 3.3 is optimized for Intel's next-generation micro-architecture Nehalem features; enhanced power management, performance, I/O and networking features for building flexible resource management solutions in an energy-efficient data center."

The performance boosts come from making sure that both hardware and software make the most of the Xen architecture. The developers have worked closely with the hardware and software vendors to achieve this fit, Pratt added.

Xen Rundown

Xen is a virtual machine monitor (VMM) for x86-compatible computers. Xen provides a platform to securely run multiple virtual machines. Each incident runs its own operating system on a single physical system with close-to-native performance.

Xen is open source and is released under terms of the GNU General Public License. However, operating systems or other applications written to use Xen's hypercall interface are not derived works of Xen and may have different license specifications.

The Xen engine, in this case version 3.3, is called a "hypervisor" and functions as the virtual machine manager. It enables multiple operating systems to share a single hardware host.

The hypervisor tricks each operating system into recognizing the host's processor, memory and other resources as being its own set of resources. However, the hypervisor actually controls the host processor and resources, allocating what is needed to each operating system in turn.

The Xen hypervisor has secure feature sets for virtualization of x86, x86_64, IA64, PowerPC and other CPU architectures.

Strong Support

Without the support of hardware vendors, it would be much harder to optimize the Xen platform without the hypervisor, Pratt explained. Even Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is actively supporting the efforts, he noted.

"All the major operating systems have been enhanced to work with Xen. Also, we tried to make the code as small as possible for security reasons," said Pratt. "We pushed as many of its functions as possible outside the core."

Since Xen.org has not not released many version upgrades, version 3.3 provides many new features, the most significant of which are enhanced performance and better scalability, he said.

New Goal

The industry is moving toward expanding virtualization to the desktop and mobile computing platforms. Version 3.3 targets that trend, according to Pratt.

The current release shows work done on power management to accommodate desktop and laptop computing. Also, Xen.org is working toward its use on smartphones, he said.

"The Xen hypervisor architecture will be able to handle all of this. Other hypervisors have no foothold for this," said Pratt.

The release is now available for download here.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jack M. Germain


More by Jack M. Germain

Yahoo Lets FOSS Community Drive Its Traffic Server
November 04, 2009
Yahoo Traffic Server is an app server for builders of cloud services. The software package enables session management, authentication, configuration management, load balancing and routing for an entire cloud computing stack. Yahoo has now open sourced a version of the application through Apache.
Is AES Encryption Crackable?
November 03, 2009
A team of researchers has discovered what they think could be a flaw that leaves AES encryption open to attack. The technique has only been shown in a theoretical setting; in practice, such a hack would be very difficult to pull off. Still, such a finding could bring into question the faith that's been placed in AES -- and spur new innovation to make encryption even better.
Windows 7 Is a Snooze
October 29, 2009
It's accurate to say that Windows 7 straightens out some of the problems with Vista. Aside from that, though, there aren't a whole lot of standout reasons to upgrade to the new OS, especially if you're currently on XP or you honestly don't mind Vista. The new features that are present aren't quite worth the trouble to learn how to use, and if you happen to have even slightly old equipment, forget about it.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network