Red Hat buys virtualisation firm

Linux vendor Red Hat has bought its way further into the virtualisation market, to compete against VMware, Citrix and Microsoft, with a US$107 million purchase of Qumranet.

Through the deal, announced last week, Red Hat picks up Qumranet's server and desktop virtualisation portfolio and takes on its team of developers and support staff. The Israel-based company maintains KVM (kernel-based virtual machine), one of the leading open source hypervisors.

It also sells a virtualisation desktop infrastructure (VDI) product, SolidICE, which runs the user's desktop on a remote server, and which competes with Citrix's XenDesktop and VMware's VDI.

Qumranet uses its own proprietary thin-client protocol called Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments (Spice), which lets remote desktops run at high speed.

The purchase would deliver expertise to back a virtualisation strategy that has been forming at Red Hat over the past two years. It allows the company to integrate virtualisation more closely with its Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating system, bringing it into closer competition with the leading virtualisation specialist VMware, and with Microsoft, whose Hyper-V plugs virtualisation into Windows Server.

"Red Hat will be one of only two companies in the world with a comprehensive virtualisation portfolio," said Paul Cormier, vice president of tools and technologies at Red Hat, at a press conference last week.

Only Microsoft and Red Hat have an operating system, hypervisor, and all the management and other components of virtualisation software, Cormier said. Microsoft has planned a virtualisation event for this week, which is expected to include new product announcements.

Red Hat's Enterprise Linux 5 operating system already includes integrated virtualisation, based on the widely used, free Xen hypervisor. The lead developer of Xen, XenSource, was bought by Citrix in 2007.

In June, Red Hat announced that it was building an embedded Linux hypervisor based on KVM. This is expected to allow all major operating systems to run on Red Hat servers. Red Hat does not appear to be shifting wholesale from Xen to KVM.

"Red Hat will support Xen until at least 2014 (seven years after the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5)," the company said in a statement. "We are committed to insulating our customers from changes in the infrastructure components and this is why we created an open virtualisation management standard (the Libvirt API)."

"This ... allows customers and ISVs to build virtualisation management applications, processes and configurations based on a stable API, independent of the underlying virtualisation technology."

KVM differs from other hypervisors because instead of running a thin layer of virtualisation software between the hardware and the operating system, it builds virtualisation components into the Linux kernel itself. This promises better efficiency, and KVM is reported to be one of the fastest hypervisors that uses virtualisation features in 64-bit processors.

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