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Microsoft Virtualization

Microsoft Brings Arm Support To Azure Virtual Machines (zdnet.com) 16

It's been a long road, but Microsoft announced on April 4 a preview of Arm support on Azure virtual machines via its work with Ampere Computing. ZDNet reports: Ampere is a startup that makes server chips. Ampere announced last year it had signed up Microsoft and Tencent Holdings as major customers. "We are now supporting Arm on Azure as well. This has been a long journey to bring up Ampere on Azure with Windows as the Root Host OS! we are also supporting Windows 11 Arm VMs in preview for developers!" tweeted Hari Pulapaka, the director of PM for Azure Host OS and the Windows OS platform. "FYI all Windows developers who have been asking for VM support in Azure, it's here now."

Azure VMs with Ampere Altra Arm-based processors will offer up to 50 percent better price-performance than comparable x86-based VMs for scale-out workloads, Microsoft officials said. These new VMs are also for Web servers, application servers, open-source databases, gaming servers, media servers, and more, they added. The preview is initially available in the West US 2, West Central US, and West Europe Azure regions. Ampere's announcement of the Azure VM preview is here.

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Microsoft Brings Arm Support To Azure Virtual Machines

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  • Linux boxes end up having less overhead, which means Windows as host or client is going to cost your more money.

    • Azure HCI isn't windows though.

    • This is exactly what we have observed. We have a cross platform testing framework. In order to run the framework on a windows VM (as opposed to linux) we need the higher tier VM which naturally costs more money.
  • NICE! Except too bad they're only supporting Windows and Linux on this thing. There is more to the world of computing than just these two kernels. The BSDs for instance have great Aarch64 support, and have been well supported by VMware's ARM offerings since day-one. They also work on AWS and OCI. Microsoft, gotta step up your support game a little here please!

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Because BSD does not matter in this space at all. Don't miss read that as BSD does not matter, there are plenty of things like IoT where it could be an asset but SAAS, PAAS, IAAS its pointless.

      The Kernel/Operating system is basically a portable abstraction layer for the the hypervisor. The kernel exists to provide a program interface, that mirrors the one on your development workstation. The operating system/userspace is a cut-down thing that exists to again provide a handful of very general libraries and

    • Microsoft doesn't care about supporting the people who want to run BSD on Azure. Both of you are SOL.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by ZiggyZiggyZig ( 5490070 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2022 @04:10AM (#62418442)

    I'd be more reassured if their server were supported by legs instead: imagine being supported on your arms all day long! Surely they will end up falling and precious data will be lost.

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      You misunderstand: this is for the developers, not the servers. While clouds are comfortable to sit on, developers need arm support since they are typing all day.

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