Windows IT Pro is the leading independent community for IT professionals deploying Microsoft Windows server and client applications and technologies.
  
  
  Advanced Search 


September 09, 2008

Microsoft Finally Details Standalone Hyper-V

RSS
Subscribe to Windows IT Pro | See More Windows OSs Articles Here | Reprints | Or get the Monthly Online Pass—only $5.95 a month!

There's been a lot of information around Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V this year, but one of the biggest outstanding questions regarded something called Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008, a standalone version of the Hyper-V role in Server 2008. This week, finally, those questions have been answered.

Monday, at a Microsoft Virtualization event in Bellevue, Washington, the software giant unveiled a few interesting virtualization news tidbits. For example, the company's System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008 product, which can manage environments running on all of Microsoft's virtualization platforms, will ship within 30 days. The company also showed off some live migration features of Windows Server 2008 R2, due next year.

The most exciting news, in my mind, however, was about Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008. To differentiate this from the version of Hyper-V that ships in Server 2008, I'll refer to the standalone version as Hyper-V Server 2008. (The Server 2008 version is called Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V.)

As with System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008, Hyper-V Server 2008 will ship within 30 days. Microsoft had previously revealed that it would sell this product for $28, but on Monday the company announced that it would be given away for free and made available as a Web download. Like VMware's ESX solution, Hyper-V Server 2008 is a "bare metal," hypervisor-based virtualization platform. The differences between the two are interesting, and which one you'll use will depend on your needs.

First, Server 2008 Hyper-V is Microsoft's most full-featured virtualization platform. With this product, Server 2008 runs in the parent partition and provides unique capabilities around automated failover and high availability functionality. Larger enterprises will want to deploy Server 2008 Hyper-V to take advantage of that product's unlimited virtualization licensing as well.

With Hyper-V Server 2008, Microsoft's Hyper-V hypervisor is installed in the parent partition, and it provides just the bare essentials required for booting the system, providing hypervisor services, and exposing the management hooks necessary for System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008. It does include drivers as well, but little else from Server 2008. It's not Server Core. It's much less than that: At boot time, you'll be prompted from a command line interface to configure some basic configuration options. But management occurs from the free Hyper-V management console (on Vista or Server 2008) or System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008.

Microsoft says the performance characteristics of Server 2008 Hyper-V and Hyper-V Server 2008 are identical. But this version of the product has a few differences. It's limited to four physical processors and 32GB of RAM. There is no clustering support.

Because Hyper-V Server 2008 does not include Server 2008, customers who choose to install this version of the hypervisor will typically run Windows Server 2000 or Windows Server 2003, or SuSE Linux, in child partitions on the server. (You can run Server 2008 in a child partition, but if you're going to do that, it makes more sense to use that as the parent partition and stick with Server 2008 Hyper-V.) So it's a good solution only for those times when Server 2008 is not needed. And if you still need to run Windows NT 4.0 virtual machines, you'll have to stick with Virtual Server 2005 R2. Fortunately, all of these environments can be managed via a single tool, System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008.

Microsoft has also opened up its certification program to its entire virtualization platform. There's a new certification specific to Hyper-V, and all of its server, desktop, and management standalone exams are being expanded with virtualization content.

End of Article



Reader Comments
Microsoft are so behind VMware it's untrue. It's great for small businesses, but then so is VMware Server / ESXi from VMware, both also free. A large enterprise couldn't seriously consider using Hyper-V for their virtualisation as it as the moment though.
I also find it a bit ironic that Microsoft won't support their own operating system I.e. NT4, whereas VMware will!

professor September 10, 2008 (Article Rating: )


At first look the lacking parts of Hyper-V standalone version might get noticed, but my guess is it is part of the portfolio Microsoft is building step by step, and this part is probably the equivalent to VMware's ESX3.5i firmware level Hypervisor. That said, it might be very close to what VMware offers.
Anyway I'll be publishing real world reviews of testing and using ESX3.5, Hyper-V along with other important Virtualization platforms such as HP-VM (VMs for IA64) and Sun Solaris LDOM (Sparc VMs).
You can tune in at http://itprofessional-mastermind.com/forum and http://itprofessional-mastermind.com/blog

Yours,

Jack.

ybezalel September 13, 2008 (Article Rating: )


I don't understand..why can't they include/build enough of the OS to have the management GUI running locally? At least snapshotting and basic operations?

anonymuos September 20, 2008 (Article Rating: )


You must be a registered user or online subscriber to comment on this article. Please log on before posting a comment. Are you a new visitor? Register now




Top Viewed ArticlesView all articles
Battery Life Issues Almost Certainly Not Windows 7's Fault

While Microsoft is still investigating a notebook battery life issue that was supposedly caused by Windows 7, some interesting trends have emerged. ...

Confirmed: Battery Life Issues Not Windows 7's Fault

Microsoft on Monday issued a lengthy statement about the recent Windows 7 battery controversy, echoing my assessment from earlier in the day, but backing it up with hard, cold evidence. ...

Microsoft Warns of Windows Version Expirations

Microsoft warned that this year will see three out-of-date Windows versions slip into retirement. ...


Windows OSs Whitepapers Protecting Microsoft SharePoint

Related Events VirtualizationPro 2010 Summit & Expo

SQL Server Virtualization for Performance and Security

Reduce Fax Costs by Virtualization

Check out our list of Free Email Newsletters!

Windows OSs eBooks Understanding and Leveraging Code Signing Technologies

A Guide to Windows Certification and Public Keys

SQL Server Administration for Oracle DBAs

Related Windows OSs Resources Introducing Left-Brain.com, the online IT bookstore
Looking for books, CDs, toolkits, eBooks? Prime your mind at Left-Brain.com

Discover Windows IT Pro eLearning Series!
Clear & detailed technical information and helpful how-to's, all in our trademark no-nonsense format


Windows IT Pro Home Register FAQ for Windows WinInfo News
Europe Edition About Us Contact Us/Customer Service Media Kit Affiliates / Licensing  
SQL Server Magazine Office & SharePoint Pro DevProConnections IT Job Hound
Left-Brain.com Technology Resource Directory asp.netPRO ITTV Windows SuperSite 
 
 Windows IT Pro is a Division of Penton Media Inc.
 © 2010 Penton Media, Inc. Terms of Use | Privacy Statement