VMWare Rolls Out Vista Virtualization 152
MsManhattan writes "VMWare Inc. today is slated to introduce a new version of its workstation virtualization software that supports Windows Vista. The upgrade, VMWare Workstation 6, enables users to run Vista as a host or a guest operating system. Additionally, it allows users to store a virtual machine setup on a portable device — like as a USB drive — and transfer the set-up to another computer. Virtualization, an old concept that has gained new momentum, can help organizations optimize their infrastructures but it can also create expensive management headaches. Just the same, the analyst group Gartner predicts that three million virtual machines will be in use by 2009, up from today's 500,000."
I hope VMWare's fixed its Vista perf problems (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I hope VMWare's fixed its Vista perf problems (Score:5, Funny)
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1) this is the commercial version of VMware.
2) the beta versions of VMware WS 6 had debug code active that slowed down the guest VM. try the final release of VMware WS 6, and you'll find there are no longer any performance issues that are VMware's fault.
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</bitterresentmentfromgamingonVista>
I'm using a sys w/ several times Vista's req's (Score:3, Informative)
I'm hoping VMWare version 6 fixes this.
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Not sure if you wanted a reason or was just posting an idle piece of info. Either way...
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Re:The problem is Vista's excessive layering. (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't much different than any other modern OS. They all have strict separation of user/kernel code and libaries at a given point. OS X and Windows both have clearly defined subsystems (Win32/Posix/.NET3?, Cocoa/BSD/etc.)
and let's see what you'd have if you ran VMware in Linux
- JavaScript running on some browser
- some browser running on Qt/Gtk and libc
- Qt/Gtk running on an X server
- X server and some browser running on libc
- libc running on some unixlike kernel
- some unixlike kernel running on VMware
- VMware running on libc, the kernel, and Gtk
- Gtk running on an X server
- X server running on libc
- libc running on some unixlike kernel
- some unixlike kernel running on real hardware
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Just three million? (Score:3, Interesting)
Everyone uses virtualization now.
Half the servers are virtualized.
Where I work some laptops are fitted with virtualized DOS/Win98 environments for very old software (to control old EPROM burners etc). Much easier to roll out a working VM environment and just copy it around than fiddling with constantly changing hardware.
Re:Just three million? (Score:5, Informative)
You can mount directories from the host O/S to save certain pieces of information (bookmarks for example) so that they persist across VMs. Everything else, you aren't really worried about.
Layne
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Take a snapshot, do an install. Tweak to make portable. Revert the snapshot to pre-install. See if the app works from the USB drive (which is actually mounted under linux, and shared to the vmware session).
Good stuff.
Each different VMWare product i
Re:Just three million? (Score:5, Informative)
Take a snapshot, do an install. Tweak to make portable. Revert the snapshot to pre-install. See if the app works from the USB drive (which is actually mounted under linux, and shared to the vmware session).
Thing is, it doesn't prevent phishing, stealing sensitive info or any of this. Even if you try and keep everything important out of the virtual machine, you still have to type out your e-banking login in there, to login to your e-banking.
Bottom line, it makes reverting after a disaster easier. Which is easy enough on the real machine if you are doing full & regular incremental backups with a program like Acronis True Image.
Virtual machine has its uses, but it's not a layer of security, just the good old "divide and conquer" principle, as if you had a dedicated web browsing machine.
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Dont be so sure about this!
I've read an article (cant remember where) that said that some VM apps have security issues to, allowing malware in the client to infect the host.
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Maybe I'm missing something here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maybe I'm missing something here... (Score:5, Informative)
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Can the OS even tell it's being virtualized?
This seems about as enforceable as saying "you're not allowed to have a screen background with boobies in it".
I can envision a lot of people saying fsck them and doing it anyway.
Cheers
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The main point is to stop big organisations from using cheap versions of Vista instead of expensive ones. They are (a) the people most likely to be using virtualisation and (b) the least likely to use sw outside of the EULA.
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Right, windows sucks, and so on! What about OSX, which version do I buy to virtualize that?
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Yes, considering that's not true.
The truth is that you can't use the two LEAST expensive versions for virtualization (not counting the stupid N versions). Vista Business, Enterprise, and Ultimate all have virtualization clauses in their EULA.
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64 bit support (Score:2, Informative)
New Support for 32-Bit and 64-Bit Operating Systems
This release provides experimental support for the following operating systems:
* 32-bit and 64-bit Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.5 (Beta, formerly called 4.0 Update 5) as host and guest operating systems
* 32-bit and 64-bit SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 SP4 (Beta) as host and guest operating systems
* 32-bit and 64-bit
Back to good(?)-old-days of dumb terminals? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Only thing left is for it to support multiple keyboards and mice to take us back to that.
Citrix [citrix.com] or vanilla Terminal Server [microsoft.com] springs to mind if you want to do this sort of thing. Granted it's not sharing a machine locally, but that isn't as useful as sharing across a network using cheap end client systems.
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This is very useful for organizations with hundreds of servers, many of which may be only running a single resource-friendly application. The department that I work in, for example, is moving the contents of several web application servers onto one new, larger server running VMWare.
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Personally, the company that I work for doesn't care whether I'm a techie or not. I'm a developer to them, and they aren't willing to shell out hundreds of dollars so I can run a special, unsupported setup when they have hundreds of PC's to maintain in a controlled environment. Which company do you work at that allows you to install whatever OS you want on your development system, using an unsupported virtualizatio
Multiple monitors (Score:2)
Pfft. Easy. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pfft. Easy. (Score:5, Funny)
A Pointy Stick needs your permission to continue. (Score:2)
If you started this action, continue.
* Emulating the Vista Experience
To continue, jam a pointy stick in your eye, and then click OK.
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I *heart* VMware (Score:3, Interesting)
Example: A system fails to come back up after update and gives me my favorite hal.dll error. Since the hardware abstraction layer is different for nearly every machine, simply grabbing the hal.dll from another machine is not possible.
Now there are several strategies to tackle this problem, for this instance however, because this was a virtual machine living with several other guest OSes which are all running on identical virtual hardware I simply ran a compare between the system32 drives of the borked windows and a working one - found several HUNDRED missing files (how did that happen, who knows), mounted the borked vmdk as the g: drive and copied the good files over to it.
unmounted and rebooted to fully operational status.
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That's odd, because I have been able to simply expand the appropriate hal.dll from only about seven choices on the Windows CD-ROM. I wouldn't try pulling one from another machine; regardless, most of them use ACPI Multiprocessor. Unless you are running Datacenter with some
Warning: Vista EULA Restrictions (Score:5, Informative)
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Didn't it work before? (Score:2, Interesting)
I know Vista Home can run VMWare Server as a host (tried it) and Parallels on the Mac can run the MSDN version as a guest (seen it).
So what's the news? Is it really just that Workstation 6 has come out of beta?
Not very well... (Score:2)
Not very well...
http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=234079&thr
Network in a box (Score:2)
Re:Network in a box (Score:5, Interesting)
Xen has a number of unfriendly (minor) glitches. It is locked in to specific kernel versions unless you really want to have a lack of stability. On the Xen mailing list developers have stated it is not suitable for enterprise use yet.
I was wondering if people are feeling positive about the future of Xen in general? There is still an active developer community (perhaps equivalent in size to mythtv a year or two ago), but will Xen be beaten back by the rapid advance of other technologies, or are the benefits from Xen enough to keep it rolling forwards regardless of alternative virtualisation products?
FWIW, I have 9 Xen virtual systems running on one core 2 duo server (3GB ram) now, and will be pushing that up to about 12 systems as a 'network-in-a-box' solution to a lot of my coding and home network requirements too and I am generally a big fan. I prefer vmware by a long margin for ease of use, but in terms of raw power Xen seems to have vmware beaten by quite a margin (and the PCI passthrough is very very useful for a print server and for playing with network cards). I think Xen will obviously continue to grow but I cant help but wonder if it will fall too far behind a few years from now.
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The free and open Xen is super-slow for anything I/O related when running hardware-virtualized systems (eg Windows or unmodified Linux). Super-slow as in network and disk I/O is basically unusable for anything but single-user desktop use. It's actually so slow that VMWare's VMplayer under Linux that is *not* using hardware-virt is faster than Xen's hardware-virtualization, on the same hardware (pathetic, but true... I've tested it with
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Interesting idea, though. Your intra-machine bandwidth would be (theoretically) limited only by
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Consider the simple case of a webserver with a database backend. For various reasons
Is this a thinly disguised press release (Score:3, Informative)
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Great (Score:4, Funny)
Not Impressed So Far (Score:2)
3D Desktop? (Score:2)
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Re:3D Desktop? (Score:4, Informative)
3d acceleration (Score:4, Informative)
Parallels (Score:3, Interesting)
If the Linux version of VMware offers something similar, I'd be very interested.
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I have both Fusion and Parallels installed on my MBP. Both are nice in different ways. I'm looking forward to them both evolving and growning in the near future.
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cpu frequency problems (Score:3, Interesting)
Can anyone tell me if they fixed this issue in 6?
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Note that this is a known bug in 5.5.x.
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What's yours like? ALso, do you have the URL(s) of this known issue? I'd like to read about it.
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Anyway, KVM/QEMU handles host clock changes fine and I'm already finding it a good replacement for VMware Workstation. In some ways it's even better (much easier to install, ALSA sound output). Just need a current CPU for it.
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Works great in VMWare Fusion for Mac (Score:4, Informative)
VMWare Fusion would be just about perfect if they added support for adding block devices from files like on linux. Hopefully in the next beta.
Why?! (Score:2)
For a low low price of $420, a Linux user can run Windows Vista on their Linux distribution.
If I could an OS, I would build custom Linux OS that exclusively runs VMware. Kinda like Windows 98 and Dos. The computer would boot with Linux OS like older pcs booted DOS first, then go straight to Vmware so the entire computer is virtualized. And the Linux OS is designed to only allow vmware to access the internet.
Gartner is very wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
Our small company alone will have rolled out more than 5000 virtual machines by that time, which would account for 1/500 of the volume increase. Not very likely. We replace the hardware of old legacy client systems running OS/2, put the OS/2 system inside a Xen VM, and add another VM running Linux which is our migration target. Very sweet.
There will be a lot more virtual machines by that t
Protected Media Path (Score:2)
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Anyway I'm a web developer so I need to test sites in IE, plus there's a few apps that don't feel like running wi
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All I said was that I installed from the wrong cd by mistake.
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http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/11/30/ie6-a
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Too expensive (Score:2)
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Is there a reason to want to do that? (Score:3)
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- a developer testing their app
- a sysadmin testing Vista against all the apps their users need, all the logon scripts, etc. etc. etc.
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Post the actual link [networkphysics.com] rather than your (or someone elses) blog in hopes of getting ad revenue.
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