Red Hat Releases RHEL 5.1, Includes Virtualization 63
eldavojohn writes "Red Hat has announced their release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.1, which includes integrated virtualization. Also of note, 'Red Hat Enterprise Linux is also available on Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), a web service that provides resizeable compute capacity in the cloud. This collaboration makes all the capabilities of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, including the Red Hat Network management service, world-class technical support and over 3,400 certified applications, available to customers on Amazon's proven network infrastructure and datacenters.'"
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According to the article, it sounds like the only thing they added for 5.1 is support for Windows guests.
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Cool (Score:1, Funny)
yesterday's news today (Score:5, Informative)
Many of other distros have included Xen for quite some time.
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The people at Xen Source primarily developed Xen.
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Do you really believe that?
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C//
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*blink*
C//
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Re:yesterday's news today (Score:4, Informative)
Re:yesterday's news today (Score:4, Funny)
coming tomorrow (Score:3, Funny)
Re:yesterday's news today (Score:5, Informative)
Essentially they've developed their own interaction layer around the virtualization layer. While Xen is the furthest along for the moment, RedHat, it seems, aims to be hypervisor agnostic as far as the management goes.
"Many of other distros have included Xen for quite some time."
Including Fedora and Redhat (and as far as stabilizing Xen3 enough to be usable on various mainstream kernels they've done an impressive job; having played around with Xen since FC4 I can recall the fun of building my own xen kernels from the xen mainline and getting them to play nice. It used to be significantly more painful back then.).
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Sounds odd to me, but that's their business.
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Redhat has also included Xen for quite some time, if you take that to mean since earlier this year. They've also been touting their virtualization abilities since RHEL 5.
Novell also offers virtualization (through Xen), and you'll notice that they take the same stance as RedHat: Our virtualization is hot as snot, and nothing can compare.
I'm glad everyone is making cool front ends to Xen. Point and drool folk need that. But please, make the companies pu
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I have tried it out running an instance of OEL 5 (64-bit) as a dom0, an Oracle Enterprise Linux 5 (64-bit) as a domU, and an Oracle Enterprise Linux 4.4 (32-bit) as a domU.
The domains startup well, and disk I/O performance seems to be close to native speed.
More tests are required though. In particular testing NFS performance and installation O
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My guess is that it's Xen. RHEL5 includes virtualization with Xen, so I'm pretty sure it's the same in 5.1.
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Sorry I forget the reason for why they might change, but it had to do with compatibility and ease of use.
At
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Live migration? (Score:3, Interesting)
How good is the live migration support? Has anyone used it?
Is this based on Xen or something else?
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Re:Live migration? (Score:5, Informative)
The live migration of fully virtualized (hvm) guests is now supported and works swimmingly well. There is 0 downtime, only a small hiccup in the network connection, which is not noticeable unless you are watching for it. We've transferred mid-download on the domU and have not dropped a packet.
The only issue we've really had is having to re-setup the NIC cards of HVM guests after the upgrade. They apparently see a different (better?) piece of hardware for the virutalized network card.
Live migration of paravirtualized guests has always worked well and continues to do so.
ACPI is now supported in windows guests, which is a big bonus for us.
32-bit paravirtualized guest also work on 64-bit dom0's. This is only a "technology preview" but so far has worked pretty good (for the day and half we've had a system running on it). However live migration from a 64-bit host to a 32-bit host (and vice versa) does not appear to work. I've not delved into it enough to find the problem though.
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AWS (Score:2)
Kerberos 1.6 Support! Yeah! (Score:5, Interesting)
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One question: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:One question: You beat me to it! (Score:2)
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Virtualization bugs me.... (Score:1)
Its TIMESHARING! Duh! ( Not timeslicing! )
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Virtualization... (Score:2)
It's even kind of surreal, knowing that Red Hat 6.0 was released in 1999. I still have a copy of the original Red Hat 5.x release from 1998.
I realize it's a different product and all, but it's kind of weird that this sounds like 1998 all over again.
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kvm should be looked into if you are considering (Score:4, Interesting)
[0] - http://kvm.qumranet.com/kvmwiki [qumranet.com]
[1] - http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/index.php/VDE [virtualsquare.org]
Re:kvm should be looked into if you are considerin (Score:2)
What do you mean by this? The graphics support in Xen and KVM is pretty much the same, given that they both use qemu for VGA emulation. If you're talking admin-Gui on CentOS, it's virt-manager for both.
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What worries me is Amazon (Score:2)
They started with the books.
then doing stores fr other merchants.
Then a search engine.
Now datacenters.
Wish them well, but honest to god, I donot know how that may end well.
How long (Score:2)
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The KVM or not? (Score:1)