Monday, October 10, 2005 - Posts

Self Managing Dynamic Systems update

Following my last post, here's a few links on microsoft.com which provide more information.

A brief on virtualisation is here, and a whitepaper on virtualisation can be found here.

But wait... just found more. This is the official press release. There's a few interesting remarks in there (apart from the Q&A about the release itself obviously).

  • First, the list of vendors who have licensed the VHD (Virtual Hard Disk) file format. Gilles Vollant software is in there - famous for it's WinImage software I was invited to test a little while back.
  • Secondly is the remark by Peter Morowski, VP of software in Dells enterprise systems group. This was relevant as I can announce as track owner for Core Infrastructure at IT Forum this year in Barcelona, that Dell will be presenting a session focusing around this type of technology. More on this to follow shortly, as we are finalising the content as I type.
  • Thirdly, that XenSource are mentioned to have either licensed the VHD file format or are building solutions that integrate with Virtual Server 2005 R2 (it doesn't state which, but you can bet I'll be doing some investigating). Interesting, but I'll say no more.

 

License changes for Windows Server - Virtualisation goes mainstream

BIG NEWS DAY FOR VIRTUALISATION TECHNOLOGY!

As was just announced at SoftSummit in Santa Clara, CA today, Microsoft is making some big changes to licensing in from Windows Server 2003 R2 which launches very soon. As was announced at the Microsoft Management Summit earlier this year, Microsoft is committed to making a "big bet" on virtualisation. Now that could mean a lot of different thing to different people, but certainly something as a headline which pleases me as it's without doubt my favourite technology. Let's see what that "big bet" really means as today started the wave of change.

Two announcements today affect the way in which Windows Server licensing changes, and for the first time in Microsoft history takes into account the industry trend of a the increasing significance of virtualisation technology.

The first announcement recognises that many companies have images of virtual machines sitting on their hard disk - maybe as a library for test and development purposes. Today, licensing rules means that you must have a license to install that operating system instance, regardless of whether it is turned on and running - in other words (and these are mine rather than official MS licensing speak, so please note the disclaimer on my blog), your license provides the right to install the operating system. Now this could be expensive if you have 10, 20, 100 or even 1000's of virtual images in your library. Each image would require a separate license. The change is that the license EULA will in the future be a "use right". For example, 100 virtual images, 3 running = 3 licenses required. The cost savings here could be huge, and removes a significant barrier to the use of virtual machine technology.

The second announcement is equally as significant, and applies to Windows Server 2003 R2 Enterprise Edition only (ie not Standard). Due to the power of server technology these days, and when looking to the near future when we start talking Intel VT or AMD Pacifica technology, people are going to increasingly be looking at consolidating their workloads onto virtual machines. Again, as for the first announcement, this too can be expensive and a barrier in terms of cost as you require a license for each virtual machine which is running, both host and guests. To address this, the EULA for WS2003 R2 EE (again, my words, not official legal speak) will include the right for your one license to be used to actively run up to five instances of that operating system on a single host machine. That being: One for the host operating system, plus a further four virtual machines for other workloads. The host operating system workload cannot however be used for any application services other than as a virtual machine host and management/monitoring. To put this another way, the effective workloads for the license in terms of application services being provided to your organisation is of the four virtual instances only.

This is just a summary, and part of what is termed "Self Managing Dynamic Systems". You will hear a lot more about this over the coming months, and is a major change to the way in which Virtualisation technology is going to be a key part of the future, so stay tuned!

Get TechNet Plus for half price

Thought you'd like this one if you live in the UK at least. Check out this page on microsoft.com, where there is a huge pricing discount for TechNet Plus subscriptions. If you purchase TechNet Plus directly through that site (ie not through a partner) from now until the end of the year, there is close to a 50% reduction in costs. This means, for example, a years TechNet Plus Single User subscription comes in something like £270. If it wasn't for the fact I work at Microsoft, I'd consider buying this myself, and I'm honestly not just saying that because I work at Microsoft. I'm not, and never will be, a salesman, just a techie :-). With the full evaluation software included in the subscription, including beta's of the Windows Vista client and server operating systems and servers, it really seems to me to be excellent value for evaluation and testing.