Book Image

Oracle VM Manager 2.1.2

By : Tarry Singh
Book Image

Oracle VM Manager 2.1.2

By: Tarry Singh

Overview of this book

Virtualization is taking the technology world by storm and dramatically helping organizations save money. Oracle VM is free and forked from the open source Xen hypervisor, which brings down your upfront costs for an agile data center. The robust capabilities and easy-to-use web interface of Oracle VM Manager helps administrators manage their Internal Data Center from anywhere in the world, helping us come closer to ubiquitous computing. This practical book will give you hands-on experience on how to manage your Virtual Machines using Oracle VM Manager. Equipped with step-by-step installation and management information you will not only learn to manage your Virtual Data Center but also will include this guide among the books you consider most essential. This book will take you into the various methods of importing Virtual Machines. You will learn to import VMs through HTTP/FTP, Repository servers, and even import other VM formats such as VMware VMs. You will also learn about the Xen utilities such as xm, xentop, and virsh. You will learn to manage your VMs through the simple and intuitive web interface of Oracle VM Manager. No matter how compact it may seem, this book covers all the essentials while keeping your learning experience to the point. The book has been deliberately written in a conversational manner so that you feel at home while learning Oracle VM Manager.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Oracle VM Manager 2.1.2
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewer
Preface

Virtualization: What is it?


I have assumed that you know what virtualization is and now want to explore Oracle's version of virtualization. Still we feel that a quick introduction and a brief history of virtualization can never hurt. It is very hard to compact the past 50 years of IT achievements about virtualization, but I will attempt to cover it (very) briefly.

Brief history of virtualization

To take a look at x86 virtualization—a concept that often confuses a lot of IT Managers (even today) when they are confronted by consultants, vendors, or even internal staff, we have to go back to the 60's when IBM first introduced "Time sharing". Time sharing is basically sharing resources of expensive machines among several users, something we also call multi-tasking. Back then the machines were so expensive that it was necessary to come up with something creative. Fast forwarding 50 years we have come a full circle with the re-introduction of virtualization—only this time it has come to dominate the x86 servers. This was done, or should we say initiated, by VMware, which went on to create this huge ecosystem around it. Then came Xen, an Open Source project that began its subtle penetration into the ASP space and hosting providers, and which was later to be acquired by Citrix. Microsoft, not to be left behind in the process, carried on to acquire Connectrix, and after conducting several rebranding exercises on its hypervisor, later introduced Hyper-V.

Oracle worked on Xen's Open Source technology and introduced its Xen-flavored virtualization software as well. The list is quite exhaustive as the virtualization market has become rather huge. You might even say that in the drive to battle the oversubscription monster, the mushroom effect of all of the start-ups has created the over-subscription dilemma for themselves.

The introduction of virtualization is definitely the most significant event in the history of IT. It can drive down the costs dramatically and provides several open and public platforms to general public in the form of "public clouds". VMware, Microsoft, and several other firms are constantly fighting for the "private cloud" space where the mother-of-all virtualization, IBM, is also fighting. There has been a huge data center build-up across the world where all IT firms are battling to spread their wings and go after the Cloud Computing space.