Tuesday, May 20, 2014

The problem of creating funding in a new software business is a major one, and doubly so for open so


After six months of development, Proxmox Server container home Solutions has released version 2.2 of its Virtual Environment (VE) virtualisation platform. The system supports virtual machines running both under a Kernel-based Virtual Machine ( KVM ) and in OpenVZ containers. Both can be simultaneously and transparently operated and managed on one system. While KVM completely virtualises almost every operating system, OpenVZ conserves resources by only running Linux guests on a common kernel in isolated containers. The company says that this strategy puts its product ahead of alternatives like VMware's vSphere, Microsoft's Hyper-V and Citrix's XenServer.
Proxmox VE 2.2 is based on the 64-bit version of Debian GNU/Linux 6.0.6, code-named Squeeze , although with a modified kernel from Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 (RHEL6), specifically version 2.6.32-16. Red Hat's kernel is considered to be particularly container home stable and includes a number of features backported from newer kernel versions that are important for servers. The update to Proxmox container home VE 2.2 includes OpenVZ 4.0 and version 1.2.0 of KVM.
While OpenVZ virtualisation also works with older hardware, KVM requires hardware support from Intel's VT-x or AMD-V. Many of the basic functions, such as online backups via LVM2 snapshots and live migration, are available using the JavaScript-based GUI, but some advanced functions require the Debian text console.
Proxmox VE 2.2 can be downloaded as an installable ISO and is made available under the AGPLv3 licence. Proxmox offers support for the product, with a variety of pricing plans. Help is also available on the company's public support forums and the Proxmox container home VE Wiki .
Also on The H: Vagrant distances itself from Virtualbox oVirt 3.1 "narrows container home gap" with proprietary virtualisation oVirt project attracts broad support Parallels container home joins the Linux Foundation Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 2.2 Beta released Red Hat announces Xen-free virtualisation road map
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