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What's Red Hat doing in the virtualisation business?

What's Red Hat doing in the virtualisation business?

Red Hat had made it clear that it was moving into virtualisation in a big way.

At its annual Red Hat Summit in June, the Linux powerhouse announced that it would be deploying its Embedded Linux Hypervisor, oVirt, which is based on KVM in its server line. This lightweight, embeddable hypervisor currently enables users to run Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Windows VMs on Linux.

Now that Red Hat owns Qumranet, Scott Crenshaw, Red Hat's VP of the Platform Business Unit, explains that Red Hat made the move for three reasons. First, to "accelerate time to market for a broad virtualization solution;" then to keep KVM open source, and further the investment in it." And, finally to "extend our virtualisation product line into the VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) market."


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Crenshaw then explains in more detail that "KVM will form the basis of Red Hat's embedded hypervisor product, which is slated for release early next year. We have strong interest from customers and OEMs to bring the advantages of this Linux bare metal hypervisor to the market."

"If and when," continues Crenshaw, "KVM gets deployed into Red Hat Enterprise Linux is still being determined. We designed into RHEL virtualisation the industry's first open-source, open-standards interface allowing new hypervisors and management tools to be deployed with plug-and-play ease. So managing any transition will be seamless for customers."

Crenshaw also made it clear that Red Hat is thinking about taking virtualization into the desktop market. Recently, Red Hat declined to enter the traditional Linux desktop market.

Now, with its newly acquired "SolidICE VDI solution. We will build on the excellent momentum Qumranet has generated. This is a game-changing product for the VDI market, and we expect customers to accelerate their already rapid deployment now that a company of Red Hat's stature is backing it."

SolidICE is a virtual desktop that uses SPICE (Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments) to run Windows or Linux desktops from a virtual machine on a server. Thus, it has more in common with Citrix's XenDesktop and before that its MetaFrame product line than it does conventional desktops.

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