VM 에 갑자기 관심이 생겼습니다. 뭐 단속(?)에 대비하는 마음도 있고,

너무 여유로워진 PC자원도 있고 하다 보니. 시간 날때, 리눅스로 설치하고, 그 안에서 운영해 봐야 겠습니다.

^^

http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-virtualization-software.html 에서 발췌 하였습니다.

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Top 10 Linux Virtualization Software

Virtualization is the latest buzz word. You may wonder computers are
getting cheaper every day, why should I care and why should I use
virtualization? Virtualization is a broad term that refers to the
abstraction of computer resources such as:

  1. Platform Virtualization
  2. Resource Virtualization
  3. Storage Virtualization
  4. Network Virtualization
  5. Desktop Virtualization

This article describes why you need virtualization and list commonly used FOSS and proprietary Linux virtualization software.

Why should I use virtualization?

  • Consolidation – It means combining multiple
    software workloads on one computer system. You can run various virtual
    machines in order to save money and power (electricity).
  • Testing – You can test various configuration. You
    can create less resource hungry and low priority virtual machines (VM).
    Often, I test new Linux distro inside VM. This is also good for
    students who wish to learn new operating systems and programming
    languages / database without making any changes to working environment.
    At my work place I give developers virtual test machines for testing
    and debugging their software.
  • Security and Isolation – If mail server or any
    other app gets cracked, only that VM will be under control of the
    attacker. Also, isolation means misbehaving apps (e.g. memory leaks)
    cannot bring down whole server.

Open Source Linux Virtualization Software

  1. OpenVZ is an operating system-level virtualization technology based on the Linux kernel and operating system.
  2. Xen is a virtual
    machine monitor for 32 / 64 bit Intel / AMD (IA 64) and PowerPC 970
    architectures. It allows several guest operating systems to be executed
    on the same computer hardware concurrently. XEN is included with most
    popular Linux distributions such as Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, RHEL,
    Fedora and many others.
  3. Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM)
    is a Linux kernel virtualization infrastructure. KVM currently supports
    native virtualization using Intel VT or AMD-V. A wide variety of guest
    operating systems work with KVM, including many flavours of Linux, BSD,
    Solaris, and Windows etc. KVM is included with Debian, OpenSuse and
    other Linux distributions.
  4. Linux-VServer
    is a virtual private server implementation done by adding operating
    system-level virtualization capabilities to the Linux kernel.
  5. VirtualBox
    is an x86 virtualization software package, developed by Sun
    Microsystems as part of its Sun xVM virtualization platform. Supported
    host operating systems include Linux, Mac OS X, OS/2 Warp, Windows XP
    or Vista, and Solaris, while supported guest operating systems include
    FreeBSD, Linux, OpenBSD, OS/2 Warp, Windows and Solaris.
  6. Bochs
    is a portable x86 and AMD64 PC emulator and debugger. Many guest
    operating systems can be run using the emulator including DOS, several
    versions of Microsoft Windows, BSDs, Linux, AmigaOS, Rhapsody and
    MorphOS. Bochs can run on many host operating systems, like Windows,
    Windows Mobile, Linux and Mac OS X.
  7. User Mode Linux (UML)
    was the first virtualization technology for Linux. User-mode Linux is
    generally considered to have lower performance than some competing
    technologies, such as Xen and OpenVZ. Future work in adding support for
    x86 virtualization to UML may reduce this disadvantage.

Proprietary Linux Virtualization Software

  1. VMware ESX Server and VMWare Server
    – VMware Server (also known as GSX Server) is an entry-level server
    virtualization software. VMware ESX Server is an enterprise-level
    virtualization product providing data center virtualization. It can run
    various guest operating systems such as FreeBSD, Linux, Solaris,
    Windows and others.
  2. Commercial implementations of XEN available with various features and support.
    • Citrix XenServer :
      XenServer is based on the open source Xen hypervisor, an exceptionally
      lean technology that delivers low overhead and near-native performance.
    • Oracle VM
      : Oracle VM is based on the open-source Xen hypervisor technology,
      supports both Windows and Linux guests and includes an integrated Web
      browser based management console. Oracle VM features fully tested and
      certified Oracle Applications stack in an enterprise virtualization
      environment.
    • Sun xVM
      : The xVM Server uses a bare-metal hypervisor based on the open source
      Xen under a Solaris environment on x86-64 systems. On SPARC systems,
      xVM is based on Sun’s Logical Domains and Solaris. Sun plans to support
      Microsoft Windows (on x86-64 systems only), Linux, and Solaris as guest
      operating systems.
  3. Parallels Virtuozzo Containers
    – It is an operating system-level virtualization product designed for
    large-scale homegenous server environments and data centers. Parallels
    Virtuozzo Containers is compatible with x86, x86-64 and IA-64
    platforms. You can run various Linux distributions inside Parallels
    Virtuozzo Containers.

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