Sun xVM

Sun xVM was a product line from Sun Microsystems that addressed virtualization technology on x86 platforms.[1] One component was discontinued before the Oracle acquisition of Sun; the remaining two continue under Oracle branding.

Sun xVM
Developer(s)Sun Microsystems
Operating systemSolaris
TypeVirtual machine monitor

History

Sun originally announced the xVM product family in October 2007. The brand at one time encompassed Sun xVM Server, Sun xVM Ops Center, and Sun xVM VirtualBox,[2] but the latter two products abandoned the "xVM" branding in late 2009, and are now called Oracle Enterprise Manager Ops Center and Oracle VM VirtualBox.[1]

Products

Sun xVM hypervisor

The Sun xVM hypervisor was a component of Solaris based on work that was being done in the OpenSolaris Xen community.[1] It was integrated into the OpenSolaris source base, and was available in OpenSolaris OS distributions, providing the standard features of a Xen-based hypervisor on x86-based systems.[3]

Sun xVM Server

Sun xVM Server was based on the xVM hypervisor project. Sun planned to support Microsoft Windows, Linux, and Solaris as guest operating systems.

Various features from Sun's OpenSolaris OS underlay the guest OS as part of the hypervisor environment, including Predictive Self Healing, ZFS, DTrace, advanced network bandwidth management (from the OpenSolaris Crossbow project) as well as security enhancements.[4]

Instead of having its own disk image format, Sun xVM Server was intended to import/export VMDK and VHD images to facilitate interoperation with VMware ESX Server and Microsoft's Hyper-V.[5]

In early May 2009, the Xen community at OpenSolaris.org announced that separate xVM Server development would be discontinued as such, with the Xen/OpenSolaris project filling its role and the team that previously worked on xVM Server refocusing on Ops Center as the principal means of managing multiple hypervisors on multiple physical machines from a single point of control. Sun VP Steve Wilson said that xVM hypervisor support would not be part of commercial Solaris.[6]

gollark: Well, it was 0.6 inevitable units/cm².
gollark: * scanned bee connectome
gollark: * robotic entity
gollark: `x` is the other person.
gollark: * `y` is.

See also

References

  1. "Sun's Announcement on Sun xVM hypervisor". Sun Microsystems. October 5, 2007. Archived from the original on 2012-09-08.
  2. "Sun Previews its Approach to Server Virtualization & Management". Sun Microsystems. October 5, 2007. Archived from the original on 2010-01-04. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  3. "OpenSolaris Xen Community". Sun Microsystems. Archived from the original on 2013-03-15. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  4. "VirtualBox and Sun xVM : Veritable Vijay". Archived from the original on 2015-11-16. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
  5. Sun xVM Virtualization Portfolio: Virtualizing the Dynamic Datacenter
  6. Alex Barrett (May 15, 2009). "RIP Sun xVM Server, Virtual Iron; long live Oracle VM?". TechTarget. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.