Server NewsMicrosoft's Hyper-V Beta Is Here

Microsoft’s Hyper-V Beta Is Here

ServerWatch content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.




Microsoft announced late Thursday the release of the first beta of its Hyper-V server virtualization hypervisor, previously codenamed “Viridian.” It wasn’t expected do so until early 2008.

The hypervisor formerly known as Viridian is released into its first beta at least a month ahead of schedule.

Discuss this article in the ServerWatch discussion forum

Unsure About an Acronym or Term?
Search the ServerWatch Glossary

 

The first beta release runs on the x64 version of Windows Server 2008 Enterprise Edition. Microsoft released pre-beta code in the form of a community technology preview, or CTP, for what’s now known as Hyper-V in September.

A hypervisor is a small, specialized operating system that sits on the server hardware and lets the server run more than one operating system above it, each within its own virtual machine (VM). There has been much interest in hypervisor-based virtualization in recent years, as IT shops look to make server loads more manageable and help them consolidate partially used servers for better efficiency.

Microsoft is coming late to the party, however. When it ships, Hyper-V will join an increasingly crowded, and competitive, arena, currently dominated by EMC’s VMware, followed by Citrix Systems’ XenSource.

Microsoft gave the technology the Hyper-V moniker a month ago, at the same time that it identified packaging plans for Windows Server 2008.

“Microsoft Hyper-V will provide our customers and partners a great platform on which to build their virtualization solutions, and will provide the best value in the industry,” Mike Neil, general manager of virtualization strategy in Microsoft’s Windows Server Division said in a blog post on Thursday.

While Hyper-V will officially be a feature of three editions of Windows Server 2008 — Standard, Enterprise, and Datacenter — the technology is not scheduled for general availability until 180 days after the servers ship. However, the early advent of this first beta — which wasn’t expected out until early next year — bodes well for an on-time delivery for the final code, according to Microsoft statements.

Windows Server 2008 itself is currently in the “release candidate” stage of user testing and is slated to launch, along with SQL Server 2008 and Visual Studio 2008, at a gala the company has dubbed “Heroes Happen Here” on February 27 in Los Angeles.

Meanwhile, the beta release adds some features and capabilities not found in the September CTP. For example, the beta supports what the company refers to as “quick migration,” which will let administrators move a running virtual machine from one host server to another with minimal downtime.

The Hyper-V beta also can be installed as a core component when Windows Server 2008 is set up in a Server Core configuration — a scaled down installation wherein only needed parts of the server are installed and the system is administered via a command-line interface or via a remote console instead of by using the Windows shell.

Each VM can also support up to four virtual SCSI drives and 64GB of memory per VM, according to company statements. Additionally, beta integration components are available for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP1 x86 and x64 Edition.

The beta of Hyper-V is available for download here.

This article was originally published on InternetNews.com.

Get the Free Newsletter!

Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

Latest Posts

Related Stories