Virtualization News Desk
Web Hosting Virtualization Provider, Microsoft, Releases Candidate of Hyper-V
Microsoft Reached a Virtualization Milestone
Mar. 26, 2008 01:30 PM
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Microsoft has reached a virtualization milestone, with the
release of its Hyper-VFeature-complete version of Windows Server 2008
virtualization technology.
The new feature-complete release candidate of Microsoft Hyper-V, the
hypervisor-based virtualization software available with various versions of
Windows Server 2008, is now available. A beta of Hyper-V was included with
Windows Server 2008 when it launched last month, and this release candidate
provides updated, near-final code.
Bill Hilf, General Manager of the Windows Server Division at Microsoft noted,
''As customers begin deploying Windows Server 2008, we want to ensure they have
the tools to optimize their IT infrastructure. Hyper-V will help customers
consolidate IT systems and allow their businesses to respond more rapidly to
ever-changing market conditions. Virtualization has been too complicated and
expensive for most organizations, which is why less than 10 percent of servers
are virtualized today. Our goal is to make Hyper-V broadly available, easy to
adopt and cost-effective while delivering powerful systems management
capabilities for customers' traditional and virtualized IT environments.''
Hyper-V provides customers with efficient and cost-effective virtualization
infrastructure software. It enables customers to reduce operating costs by
increasing hardware utilization, optimizing infrastructure and improving server
availability.
Customers who started evaluating Hyper-V during the beta process in December
2007 and as part of their Windows Server 2008 installation are already
experiencing more flexible IT systems, greater control, increased business
agility and higher performance.
Jason Nord, server engineer at Land O' Lakes Inc. remarked, ''Hyper-V is a
thinner, more optimized virtualization technology than we've seen from other
vendors, and we look forward to improving server utilization and better
managing our datacenter, especially in a clustered environment. While
evaluating Hyper-V, we've found it offers better support for running
simultaneous operating systems, which helps us consolidate our applications
that run on a variety of older software and servers.''
Microsoft is working with partners to help them plan, build and test their own
offerings built on Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V to address broad customer needs
and expand and enhance the platform capabilities.
Tim Lucas, President and CEO of Surgient Inc. commented, ''Surgient has seen
growing customer interest in adding support for Windows Server 2008 and Hyper-V
to our virtual lab management software so that our mutual customers can
streamline application life cycle operations, reducing capital and operating
expenses. Our customers need to be able to replicate production application
configurations in virtual labs using any virtual or physical infrastructure.
Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V delivers in all these areas, and we’re excited to
add support for it to our virtual lab management platform.''
Hardware industry partners including AMD, Dell Inc., Fujitsu, Fujitsu Siemens
Computers, Hitachi Ltd., HP, Intel Corporation, IBM, NEC, Sun and Unisys. are
also working with Microsoft to test and evaluate Hyper-V. Once final code is
available, these partners plan to integrate support for Hyper-V into their
virtualization offerings in ways that best fit their business, including
pre-installation on servers, device support, solutions and services. These
partnerships will further lower barriers for customers as they adopt
virtualization solutions, making it easier to incorporate virtualization into
their server infrastructures.
The release candidate features an expanded list of tested and qualified guest
operating systems, which now includes Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (SP2),
Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10, Windows Vista SP1 and Windows XP SP3.
Host server and language support has been expanded to include the 64-bit (x64)
versions of Windows Server 2008 Standard, Enterprise and Datacenter, with
English, German and Japanese language options available as well as enablement
of Hyper-V on international locales, and further language options and support
available in the final release. In addition, the release candidate comes with
support for more hardware configurations and offers improved performance and
scalability. It also includes the option for installing Hyper-V Manager
Microsoft Management Console on Windows Vista SP1 for remote management.
Deployment and management capabilities are essential when building a scalable
virtualization infrastructure. With the Microsoft System Center suite and the
next version of System Center Virtual Machine Manager, available in the second
half of 2008, customers can seamlessly manage their physical and virtual servers
with a single set of consistent, compatible tools. Customers will be able to
rapidly provision and configure new virtual machines and centrally manage their
virtual infrastructure, regardless of whether they are running on Hyper-V,
Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2, VMware ESX Server or VMware Infrastructure 3.
A future release of System Center Virtual Machine Manager will also add support
for the Xen hypervisor.
The final version of Hyper-V remains on target for release by August 2008,
which aligns with the previously stated timing for delivery within 180 days of
the Windows Server 2008 release to manufacturing.
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