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Oracle Is Latest To Take On VMware
Posted by
kdawson
on Tue Nov 13, 2007 03:26 AM
from the virtual-virtual-everywhere dept.
from the virtual-virtual-everywhere dept.
BobB writes "Oracle is going after its piece of the hot virtualization market by introducing an open source Xen-based hypervisor to compete against those from Novell, Red Hat, and VMware. Oracle VM, unveiled Monday at the Oracle OpenWorld convention in San Francisco, enables virtualization on Oracle and non-Oracle software applications and on the Linux and Windows OSs. It also operates on industry-standard x86- and x86-64-based servers. Oracle claims it offers virtualization at a lower cost than competitors can." VMware stock dropped over 10% on the news; Oracle's stock rose. The market was not punishing Oracle for the unpatched zero-day vulnerability (public exploit available) that the company won't patch until Jan. 15.
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Relevance (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Relevance (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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retarded comments in summary (Score:5, Insightful)
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Exactly.
And why would we expect the market to "punish" them? Does anyone actually expect it to cost them sales or other revenue, or increase their costs, or otherwise have a relevant impact on their financial status?
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Personally I have no idea. You'd have to ask the virus writers if someone's planning on writing a database transmitted virus. If one of them decides a guaranteed unpatched hole with a finished exploit available is just too good an opportunity to pass up, well, then I could certainly see how the subsequent fallout would affect Oracle's financial status.
I mean, sure, anyone who's actually dealt with Oracle on a daily basis has a fair idea of
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But, then, Oracle's poor security track record (they certainly redefined "unbreakable") isn't anything new and I'd hope that both markets and customers have long ago corrected for it.
c.
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Investors don't care how secure Oracle's products are, as long as they make money. If you need an example of that mentality, just look at the rise of Microsoft's stock after the release of Windows 95 and 98.
Company performance should effect investors. (Score:2)
Educating investors on what exactly they are investing in, and what the new product's likelihood of success is, is a very appropriate thing to do. Who wants to invest in a softwa
Isn't this just Oracle re-branding RHEL 5.1 (Score:5, Interesting)
And how can this make VMWare stock drop by 10%? Xen ain't new (or great).
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"Unbreakable Linux" is simply RHEL with a bunch of tweaks to make Oracle apps run better.
The tweaks are nice, but it is the same OS.
Not rebranding, respinning (Score:2)
That said, you're right to wonder at all the reaction to this announcement. Everybody and his dog are doing virtualization solutions, and the Oracle version is hardly groundbreaking. Indeed, since Xen only supports guest OSs that are hypervisor aware, it's not quite as robust as the "pure" virtualization that VMware does. And yet Oracle has managed
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Re:UnFAKEable Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea of Oracle supplanting VMWare in the enterprise virtualisation market is even more laughable. No one is rushing to replace VMWare with Xen, and if they were, they wouldn't do it through Oracle. Oracle make databases (Oh and they do middle wear now too. Buying WebLogic was a rare smart move, provided they can stop JBoss commoditizing their market) Honestly though, Oracle should leave the rest of the software stack to the rest of the industry.
Parent
Sorta makes sense (Score:3, Interesting)
Then they can ship pre-built VM images with oracle already installed and configured. Thus, the database server becomes a VM appliance (not quite a dishwasher yet...)
Easier to support (ie lower costs) especially if the VM runs Linux. As much as I hate Oracle, this following their 'legal theft' of RHEL it all starts to hang together.
However, it remains to be seen if they can build up their support side so that is basically 'sucks less' than it does now. There is a danger that they are spreading themselves too thin.
I don't think VMWare should get too worried by this. The overall market for VM's is huge. As long as the quality of their product stays high then their market will grow along with the overall market for VM Systems.
Sun also releasing Xen-based virtualization (Score:5, Informative)
Sun is also rolling out a Xen-based virtualization solution called Sun xVM [sun.com].
More info at http://opensolaris.org/os/community/xen/ [opensolaris.org]
This is a feature separate from Solaris Zones (OS virtualization [opensolaris.org]) or
Brands (run Linux or Solaris 8 zones on Solaris 10 [opensolaris.org]) or hardware domains.
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Also, he was pointing to opensolaris, which is free of charge. You didn't call posts about RedHat's products "spam", even though both RedHat and Sun are open source oriented companies, and all the posts in question are about their open source offerings.
Any word on if it works (Score:5, Insightful)
Also - really can we get more retarded biased comments about stock prices in the summaries. It's good for a WTF chuckle.
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I used to work in a big Telecom supplier and they never dreamed about using virtualization. We already had enough performance problems using raw hardware and software.
I moved to enterprise solutions and they are all happily using virtualization. Bad thing is that almost everybody here is a Microsoft drone, I miss my shell scripts.
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vms are good for things that use mostly ram and cpu (which are easy things to upgrade - you can't really make disks just go faster)
Now fix the licensing (Score:4, Informative)
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I'm thinking of installing Oracle Linux on the server I'm putting together next week just in case it means I can try out virtulisation in case they fix the licencing. We run all servers on the bare metal entirely because of this... crazy!
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VMware support by Oracle (Score:2)
I wondered why that was so, because VMware provides a common emulated hardware foundation, and logically ought to be *easier* to support than the wild variety of actualy physical hardware out there.
Anyway, now I know why.
you're probably right (Score:2)
If virtualization can stabilize Windows 98, I'm sure that it can provide any help with stabilizing Oracle it can possibly use. If I had to run Oracle, I think I'd look for third-party support for Oracle and thumb my nose at Oracle Corp in the hope of getting more uptime than I can get with a native Oracle environment.
Any Oracle
Expect non-support-except-on-our-VMs to be normal (Score:2)
This is clearly a monopolistic practice, but I don't expect our corporate over
Oracle Is Latest To Take On VMware (Score:3, Insightful)
Please - Xen does not a vmware copy make - vmware is so much more than a virtualization product, VMware are trying to make it THE datacenter management tool.
Alex
A lot of customers want this (Score:2)
I used to work
Re:Can they compete? (Score:4, Insightful)
Never question the stupidity of a corporation when it's only ever going to improve the products you actually buy (or buy into).
Parent
Unbreakable Xen (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Unbreakable Xen (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd wager that Oracle is just adding another product for the purposes of presenting some sort of purely Oracle virtualized database solution. Petty grudges are not profitable.
Parent
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Not due to linux, nor virtualization. In fact they have probably gained a lot from linux, and why not? The less someone spends on their operating systems, the more they can spend on Oracle licenses.
They may have lost a few sales to MySQL and PostgreSQL, but that's no reason to attack linux or Xen.
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Re:Can they compete? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this quote from their Oracle VM FAQ is more telling:
In other words: they recognize that customers want virtualization. But, they don't want to support running on just any hypervisor. Doing so places them in the position of having to rely on another company's software product to run well, which is just not a good idea from Oracle's point of view. The solution? Take an open-source solution and tweak it to their own specifications. Since they have control, they're not dependent on anyone else for good performance.
They claim to do Windows virtualizaiton, but the fact is that without paravirtualied Windows drivers, any performance is going to royally stink. I'd be surprised if they invest the time to actually make those work.
What would be a good idea for them in the long run, I think, is to allow their management tool to integrate with some others -- RedHat's or XenSource's, for example -- so that customers can manage all their servers from one console, while taking advantage of Oracle's specialized distro.
Parent
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Yeah, me too. I spent some time at Oracle and while marketing paid lip service to the Microsoft stack, the division that did projects couldn't be less interesting. In a big department meeting, I asked the department head whether we will do something with C# besides Java. The room actually laughed. The department head didn't know what C# was.
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I can see supporting MS, as in making their software run on that platform. I can't see them locking themselves into MS's proprietary development system, though. What possible benefit would that have for them?
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You only need to set up a specific environment once. Then, in order to do any testing, take a copy of the environment, run whatever is needed and when happy about it, simply revert back to the original 'image' again. Do next test etc... rinse & repeat.
It also makes it easier to spread the exact identical environment to different machines/people in order to do tests in parallel and still be 'certain' that they all will be done identically. If needed you can even (temporari
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But for the diversified stock-owner you dont want each and every one of your stocks weighted down by the dead fat they're trying to protect. You want lean companies generating high profits in
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