IBM will likely add virtualization capabilities to its xSeries servers in the coming months, says Tom Bradicich, its director of server architectures. Meanwhile, Sun is building virtualization capabilities into its Solaris operating system for the first time in version 9, which is set for release next quarter. Third-party software vendors, such as VMware, are also cashing in on virtualization with new apps.
IBM will add partitioning capabilities to its product line as a precursor to adding virtualization, beginning with a four-way system--code-named Vigil--set for debut in the next two months. To make it all happen, IBM will likely borrow virtualization technology from its z-Series mainframes, Bradicich says. Mainframes use a software layer known as a hypervisor to let a single processor run multiple operating systems.
Sun is taking a different approach. In Solaris 9, it will add soft partitioning capabilities that let users create multiple partitions within a single instance of Solaris. The partitions, which Sun calls service containers, will isolate an application and give it a share of computing resources.
"We essentially build an envelope around an application," says Andy Ingram, Sun's marketing VP for Solaris. Sun claims that its approach results in better application performance, while supporters of IBM's approach say it provides greater flexibility in that users can run multiple operating systems.
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