Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Xen.org,
the home of the open source Xen hypervisor, today formally announced the
Xen® Cloud Platform (XCP) initiative – a powerful new community-led
effort to build on the growing leadership of the Xen hypervisor in
today’s cloud, and deliver a secure and proven open source
infrastructure platform for the federated cloud services of tomorrow.
The Xen Cloud Platform will accelerate the use of cloud infrastructure
for enterprise customers by providing open source virtual infrastructure
technology that makes it easy for service providers to deliver secure,
customizable, multi-tenant cloud services that work seamlessly with the
virtualized application workloads customers are already running in their
internal datacenters and private clouds, without locking them into any
particular vendor.
“The Xen Cloud Platform raises the bar – going beyond the hypervisor to
deliver a complete run-time virtual infrastructure platform product that
virtualizes storage, server and network resources,” said Mark Bowker,
analyst, ESG. “This announcement aligns the Xen community around a
common compatible product, increasing the opportunity for value-added
offerings from all ISVs, while promising to run VMs from any hypervisor.”
The low cost and rapid development benefits of the open source model,
coupled with its proven security, performance and customizability, made
Xen the hypervisor of choice for many cloud computing pioneers. The
widespread adoption of Xen in today’s most successful commercial cloud
offerings led the community to formalize the Xen Cloud Platform to
further accelerate this growth in an open, non-proprietary way. This
initiative enables open source contributors and consumers to come
together around a more focused effort to deliver a complete Xen-based
infrastructure product that supports a wide variety of current and
future cloud scenarios.
“The Xen Project has played a seminal role in enabling the creation and
rapid adoption of virtualization,” said Ian Pratt, creator of Xen and
founder of Xen.org. “Today Xen is already the most widely used
hypervisor in the service provider market and the community will be able
to build on this momentum to develop a complete, open source,
cloud-optimized Xen virtual infrastructure platform. Our goal is to
empower providers to offer a rich set of services that will catalyze
cloud adoption by the enterprise in a way that’s open, accessible and
non-proprietary.”
A key focus of the XCP initiative will be to provide technology that
permits easy interoperability between internal enterprise “private
clouds” and leading external cloud platforms like Amazon EC2, Rackspace
Cloud Servers and GoGrid. The Xen Cloud Platform will accelerate the
development of a wide variety of key technologies and standards that
address this need in an open, non-proprietary way, including:
Broad interoperability across disparate virtualization platforms – Through
standards such as the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) Open
Virtualization Format (OVF), virtual appliances will be packaged in a
hypervisor-independent format for easy transport between internal and
external clouds with no proprietary vendor lock-in.
Support for new and existing applications – Existing
applications currently running in enterprise datacenters will be
enabled to run in Xen-based cloud platforms without modification. This
flexibility will allow users to choose where each application should
run based on business needs rather than limitations of the technology
or proprietary requirements of their current virtualization or cloud
vendor.
Federated computing capacity – With federated private and
public clouds, the process of moving application workloads between
virtual datacenters and disparate cloud service providers will be
simplified.
Standardized virtualization management – Support for DMTF
standards will allow complete open management of virtual
infrastructures.
Rich virtual networking capabilities – A powerful open virtual
switch will make it easy for cloud providers to add sophisticated
network service offerings, including per-tenant network management,
intrusion detection, firewalling, routing, and load balancing.
Cloud-scale virtual storage infrastructures – Advanced storage
features required by enterprise workloads will enable virtual machines
and their physical storage to be widely separated without disrupting
application performance.
“Rackspace is very excited about the direction and scope of the Xen
Cloud Platform,” said Lew Moorman, president and chief strategy officer,
Rackspace. “We have built our Cloud Servers offering on the Xen platform
and are experiencing strong customer interest in this new model of
hosting. The cloud will not only reduce the cost of computing but also
provide instantaneous access enabling customers to improve the speed of
business. It is very exciting and encouraging to see Xen.org put the
full weight of the community behind the development of a cloud platform.”
The Xen Cloud Platform will address the needs of cloud providers by
combining the isolation and multi-tenancy capabilities of the Xen
hypervisor with enhanced security, storage and network virtualization
technologies to offer a rich set of virtual infrastructure cloud
services. The platform will also address user requirements for security,
availability, performance and isolation across both private and public
clouds. The project will not attempt to develop new, independent
management and orchestration offerings since this is an area with
existing rich offerings and active ongoing development in the community,
including open source options from the Eucalyptus Project and
OpenNebula.org, as well as solutions from cloud provider and commercial
virtualization vendors.
The Xen Cloud Platform will combine the mobility and openness attributes
of the Xen virtualization platform with innovative storage, security and
network virtualization technologies already under development as part of
Xen.org. As a result, the new platform will not only address cloud
provider requirements around security and isolation, but will also meet
next-generation user requirements for security, availability,
performance, isolation and manage between on-premise and off-premise
infrastructures.
Xen.org Advisory Board Members Voice Support
Xen.org advisory board members such as Citrix, HP, Intel, Novell and
Oracle have already voiced their support for the XCP initiative:
“As a Xen.org advisory board member and frequent contributor, Citrix
fully supports this expansion in scope for the Xen community,” said
Peter Levine, senior vice president and general manager, Datacenter and
Cloud Division, Citrix Systems (NASDAQ: CTXS). “Starting with the core
Xen platform five years ago, the Xen Client Initiative (XCI) in 2008 and
now the Xen Cloud Platform (XCP) initiative, the open source value
proposition of reliability, security, scalability and unbeatable
economics now extends from the desktop to the datacenter and cloud.
Citrix is excited to contribute to this project and looks forward to
working with all the beneficiaries – service providers, businesses and
consumers of cloud-based resources alike – to provide cloud services
that are open, interoperable and free from proprietary vendor lock in.”
“Organizations are turning increasingly to virtualization to help them
reduce operating costs,” said Nick van der Zweep, director of
Virtualization and Insight Software at HP. “With the Xen Cloud Platform,
customers will be able to leverage HP infrastructure and enable open
source virtualization for clients, clouds, and servers. This will
provide a platform for innovation, facilitating an infrastructure that
provides organizations with increased flexibility and improved levels of
service while reducing costs.”
“Extending the capability of Xen.org with the Xen Cloud Platform
initiative builds on the great foundation that we have in place today
for creating and building solid capabilities for enterprise class
clouds,” said Doug Fisher, vice president and general manager, Systems
Software Division, Intel. “This is an important step in unlocking
innovation across all disciplines of cloud computing.”
“As an active member of the Xen open source project, Novell is excited
to participate in the Xen Cloud Platform initiative,” said Carlos
Montero-Luque, vice president of business and product management for
Open Platform Solutions at Novell. “Novell is committed to an open
source model that thrives on the support and contributions of a strong
community. Creating a stable, well-defined public API for Xen will help
drive its rapid adoption inside the enterprise and in clouds.”
“Oracle continues to provide leadership and contributions to Xen.org,
and is committed to the broad availability of a complete open source
virtualization platform, independent of any OS,” said Wim Coekaerts,
vice president of Linux engineering, Oracle Corporation. “Aligning the
community around a single compatible code base will maximize the
benefits of open source virtual infrastructure for customers, and
simplify the federation of private and public clouds.”
For a list of additional supporting quotes from Xen community
supporters, please see the end of this announcement.
Today’s announcement builds on Xen.org’s leadership in the
virtualization community. In 2008, Xen.org expanded its charter and
community effort with the addition of the Xen Client Initiative (XCI),
which led the community to offer the first complete embeddable client
hypervisor ready for consumption by ISVs and OEMs. The success of the
XCI model, combined with strong demand in cloud computing and demand
from key service providers, has now led the community to further expand
the Xen.org charter to include the new Xen Cloud Platform (XCP)
initiative to accelerate open source development of a complete
cloud-optimized virtual infrastructure product. These expansions have
driven a renewed commitment to Xen with more than 250 leading companies
regularly contributing to the projects and contributions jumping over
110 percent year over year. This continued investment has enabled
Xen.org to continue to accelerate the pace of innovation in the core of
the datacenter, on client devices and now into the cloud.
About The Xen Project and Xen.org
Xen.org is the home of the open source Xen hypervisor, a fast, secure
industry standard code base for operating system virtualization. Founded
and led by Ian Pratt, the community benefits from the contributions of
senior engineers from leading hardware, software, and security vendors.
Xen.org is run for the benefit of the community by the Xen Project
Advisory Board, which is drawn from leading contributors to the project.
For more information, visit www.xen.org.
Forward-Looking Statements Disclosure
This release contains forward-looking statements which are made pursuant
to the safe harbor provisions of Section 27A of the Securities Act of
1933 and of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The
forward-looking statements in this release, including without limitation
statements made by representatives of contributors to Xen.org, do not
constitute guarantees of future performance. Investors in contributors
to Xen.org are cautioned that statements in this press release, which
are not strictly historical statements, involve risks that could cause
actual results to differ materially, including risks associated with the
demand for cloud services, the uncertainty inherent in developing
cutting-edge technology, the failure to coordinate and manage
contributions to Xen.org, competition from alternative cloud
infrastructure providers, the voluntary nature of contributions to
Xen.org, the level of resources made available to Xen.org by
contributors to Xen.org as well as other risks detailed in any public
statements or filings by Xen.org or any contributor to Xen.org. Neither
Xen.org nor any contributor to Xen.org assumes any obligation to update
any forward-looking information contained in this press release or with
respect to the announcements described herein.
Xen® is a trademark of Citrix Systems, Inc. and/or one or more of its
subsidiaries, and may be registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office and in other countries. All other trademarks and registered
trademarks are property of their respective owners.
Supporting Quotes
AMD - “AMD congratulates the Xen community for launching the Xen
Cloud Platform and providing the industry options for IaaS deployments,”
said Earl Stahl, vice president of software development, AMD. “We
believe that choice and interoperability are key in continuing to build
cost-effective and enterprise-ready cloud computing and virtualization
technology. We applaud Xen.org on its commitment to flexibility and
openness and look forward to continuing our work with the Xen Project to
help bring more economical and scalable cloud technology to the
enterprise.”
Carpathia - “Carpathia has been working to take advantage of the
capabilities the Xen platform provides to deliver Carpathia InstantOn™,
our enterprise cloud computing platform,” said Jon Greaves, CTO of
Carpathia Hosting, a leading provider of hosting services for enterprise
and Federal customers. “Our ability to take the foundation provided by
Xen and extend it to deliver unique services is helping accelerate
adoption of cloud solutions for enterprise and Federal customers. The
Xen Cloud Platform will further enhance this foundation with a set of
technologies purposely built to support the demands of our customers.”
Cloudera - “The Xen hypervisor has been widely used in enterprise
data centers because of its clean hardware abstraction for elastic,
scalable distributed systems,” said Mike Olson, CEO of Cloudera. “That
has made it a good foundation for our customers doing large-scale data
analysis using the Cloudera Distribution for Hadoop. The Xen Cloud
Platform initiative is a great next step in making an open source cloud
platform for the enterprise a reality.”
Dell - “Dell and Citrix are committed to accelerate cloud
computing by providing innovations in IT infrastructure,” said Andy
Rhodes, head of Data Center Solutions Marketing, Dell. “Together we are
helping customers use virtualization in every area of IT – from the
desktop to the datacenter and into the cloud. The Xen Cloud Platform
will provide business model flexibility and a fresh approach for
delivering IT as an infrastructure service.”
Eucalyptus Systems, Inc. - “Eucalyptus provides open source
private cloud software that will be easily combined with the Xen Cloud
Platform to allow anyone to implement an ‘Infrastructure-as-a-Service’
cloud,” said Dr. Rich Wolski, CTO and co-founder of Eucalyptus Systems,
Inc. “The rich feature set added to the Xen platform makes it suitable
for enterprises and service providers as a key enabling technology for
building on-premise clouds.”
Fujitsu - “Fujitsu highly appreciates the openness of Xen and has
been contributing to the Xen community over the years,” said Chiseki
Sagawa, president of the SOP Strategy and Development Office at Fujitsu.
“We welcome the new Xen Cloud Platform which will be a great value for
us to enhance our Trusted-Service Platform for cloud computing services.”
GoGrid - “GoGrid delivered the world’s first cloud supporting the
instantiation of both Linux and Windows and we did it using the Xen
hypervisor,” said John Keagy, GoGrid CEO. “We are still the only cloud
supporting Windows 2008 and Xen continues to meet all of our needs. The
Xen Cloud Platform will deliver an exciting tool for the enablement of
both public and private clouds and the resulting interoperability will
help accelerate the adoption of cloud infrastructure.”
HyperStratus - “An open source-based complete cloud offering is a
huge benefit to all participants in the cloud ecosystem – enterprises,
software vendors, and cloud providers,” said Bernard Golden, CEO,
HyperStratus. “The vision of bridging an internal Xen-based cloud to
public cloud providers enables cost-effective scaling while increasing
choice and flexibility.”
Juniper Networks - “Juniper is committed to delivering a Cloud
Computing Infrastructure that is based on an open, standards-based
network architecture with the flexibility to support fully converged and
virtualized data center environments,” said David Yen, executive vice
president and general manager, Data Center Business Group at Juniper
Networks. “Xen.org shares the same commitment toward open standards and
the Xen Cloud Platform will speed innovation, integration and
interoperability so customers can maximize the potential of cloud
computing.”
NetApp - “Working closely with the industry’s leading IT vendors,
NetApp provides enterprise customers and service providers with the
solutions and infrastructure needed to enable the cloud, such as secure
multi-tenancy, transparent data motion, service automation, storage
efficiency, and integrated data protection,” said Patrick Rogers, vice
president of Solutions Marketing for NetApp. “NetApp is committed to
bringing the same level of capabilities to the open source Xen Cloud
Platform.”
SoftLayer - “SoftLayer has relied on Xen to make great strides in
providing customers a dynamic, manageable and cost effective cloud
infrastructure that offers a rich set of enterprise services,” said Sean
Charnock, vice president of business development at SoftLayer.
“Formalizing the already progressing work of the community into the XCP
will provide a solid springboard for innovation in cloud computing and
only speed the rate we can leverage our expertise in on-demand data
center services to provide cutting edge cloud computing.”
VA Linux Japan - “As experts in solving problems in the areas of
open source operating systems and virtualization technology, VA Linux
Japan will work with the Xen.org community to promote and enhance the
activities of the Xen Cloud Platform,” said Iehisa “Ike” Nakamura,
president and CEO, VA Linux Japan. “Backed by our technical skills,
expertise and considerable experience in all areas of software
development, we are committed to supporting the development of the open
source based cloud development services in Japan.”