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November 12, 2007

Oracle Supports Virtualization On X86 Systems With Its Own Xen-Based Hypervisor

Galen There’s been some interesting news from Oracle today — they have announced that they will support virtualization of a long list of ten or so Oracle applications on their own flavor of the Xen hypervisor, which they dubbed Oracle VM. In addition to applications like Oracle Database, Application Server, PeopleSoft Enterprise, and Siebel CRM, customers can run other non-Oracle apps on Oracle VM as well. You’ll be able to download it for free on the 14th, though you must pay for support ($499 per year per 2-CPU system, or $999 per year for a system with unlimited CPUs). The details of the announcement can be had on Oracle’s web site.

I’m somewhat conflicted, since customers will be happy that Oracle will officially support virtualization on x86 platforms — yet they’ve just created another flavor of Xen. According to Oracle, this was necessary to integrate with Oracle management tools and fix various bugs. I understand the need for Oracle to “own” the hypervisor it has committed to support, though it seems unlikely that another offshoot of Xen will be popular for much besides running Oracle products. Consider that Oracle also offers its own version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, called Oracle Enterprise Linux, clustered file system, storage, and system management tools — it’s evident that Oracle is destined to be its own self-contained IT infrastructure.

We will have to come to terms with managing different pools of virtualized resources under the control of different tools like Sun xVM (a Xen variant), Citrix (XenSource), Oracle (another Xen variant), not to mention VMware — who runs the largest number of x86 virtual machines today. Soon Microsoft will enter the fray with Viridian, which has officially been renamed Hyper-V, as well as enhancements to MS System Center for managing both Hyper-V and VMware. Whether they admit it or not, each of these vendors is readying tools to manage competing virtualization stacks — not to mention a host of management software providers like Symantec, IBM, CA, and HP. Management is where you should focus your standardization efforts — figure out which consoles you need to run your multiple virtualized environments.

By Galen Schreck

Check out Galen's Research.

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