Microsoft and Novell unfold collaboration roadmap
Posted on 13 Feb 2007 at 08:56
Microsoft and Novell have given more details about their joint technical roadmap for the implementation of Windows support for Novell's SUSE Linux.
The two companies have announced that they will jointly develop four areas of technology to address significant problems faced by enterprise customers today: virtualisation, Web services for managing physical and virtual servers and directory and identity interoperability.
Collaboration on virtualisation will work towards the development of technology that will enable Linux and Windows servers to consolidate server workloads in heterogeneous data centres. Enterprises will be able to host SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 from Novell as a virtualised guest on an upcoming service pack of Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 service pack 1 and as an enlightened guest on the next version of Microsoft Windows Server, code-named Longhorn, using the Windows Server virtualisation technology. They will also be able to host Windows Server Longhorn as a paravirtualised guest on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10, using the Xen virtualisation technology embedded in the Linux operating system.
The necessary software components will be released throughout 2007. Intel has committed to providing paravirtualised network and block device drivers that will allow Windows Server 2000/2003/XP to run unmodified in Xen virtual environments on SUSELinux Enterprise Server 10. The drivers will let customers migrate to newer and fewer energy-efficient servers, consolidating legacy Windows or Linux implementations onto virtual servers.
'With our SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 platform launch in July 2006, Novell became the first major Linux distributor to integrate Xen virtualisation into a Linux distribution,'said Jeff Jaffe, Novell executive vice president and chief technology officer. 'In September, we became the first distribution to support virtualised Linux workloads on Xen, and today we are the first distributor to support virtualised Windows workloads on Linux. Our commitment to innovation to solve customer problems has never been greater.'
Turning to Web services-based management, Microsoft and Novell are working to make it easier for users to manage mixed Windows and SUSE Linux Enterprise physical and virtual environments by collaborating on standards-based, scalable and flexible solutions.
Novell is working with the open-source community to develop an open implementation of the Web Services for Management (WS-Management). WS-Management supports the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF), which develops platform-independent and technology-neutral standards for systems management of IT installations both within enterprises and across the Internet. Novell ZENworks Orchestrator and Microsoft System Center Operations Manager 2007 will incorporate WS-Management this year.
Standards-based protocols will also be deployed to improve directory and identity interoperability between Microsoft and Novell products and technologies, in order to improve access control for IT resources managed with either Novell eDirectory or Microsoft Active Directory.
The two companies will develop a series of demonstrations that focus on interoperability between technologies - a more detailed roadmap for this effort will be available in the first half of 2007.
Novell has also reiterated that later this month it will release translators for its version of the OpenOffice business software suite that will provide read and save support for Microsoft's new Open XML format, introduced in Office 2007.
advertisement
- Motorola pays Lucas for its Droid
- Where are the killer apps for Windows?
- Will you hit the Orange iPhone "unlimited" cap?
- USB 3 first benchmark - it's here, and it's fast
- Why Windows 7 has forced me to worry about security
- How Dixons is (under)selling Windows 7
- Do I like Windows 7 because it's so like a Mac?
- No Windows 7 drivers turn Dell M1330 into a doorstop
- Is Windows 7 good looking enough to sway an Apple fan?
- Typekit brings print-like typography to the web
- The bulletproof Dell that costs an arm and a leg
- Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview: Q&A
- Lawnmowers, the TyTN II and one odd insurance request
- There'll never be a bulletproof OS
- How far can we trust apps?
- Five nice touches in Outlook 2010
- Building a better Google
- Beware HP's horrendous printer-driver glitch
- Microsoft debuts free Morro antivirus package
- Getting started with Search Server 2008 Express
advertisement

Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk
