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Red Hat and Microsoft ink virtualisation support deal

Agreement will benefit firms running a mix of Windows and Linux in the datecentre

Daniel Robinson, vnunet.com 17 Feb 2009

Red Hat and Microsoft have agreed to build better interoperability between their respective virtualisation platforms, and to provide co-ordinated technical support for customers.

The move is likely to prove beneficial for enterprises operating a mixture of Windows and Linux systems in the datacentre.

Under the terms of the agreement, Red Hat will validate Windows guests to be supported on Red Hat Enterprise Server, while Microsoft will likewise validate Red Hat Enterprise Linux guests to be supported on Windows Server platforms with the company's Hyper-V technology.

Furthermore, once validation is completed, customers with technical support agreements will be able to receive co-ordinated technical support for both Windows virtual machines running on Red Hat, and Red Hat Linux running on Windows Server 2008 and Hyper-V Server.

Windows and Linux are the most common platforms found in datacentres, and the deal is likely to make life easier for large organisations looking at extending their use of virtualisation.

"Most customers run heterogeneous networks, and having interoperability between these two major platforms will make virtualising these environments much easier for enterprise customers," said Gary Chen, research manager for enterprise virtualisation at analyst firm IDC.

While some industry observers have compared the agreement to Novell's deal with Microsoft in 2006 covering mutual protection from patents, Red Hat said that the current agreement does not include any patent or open source licensing rights, nor any financial clauses other than industry-standard certification and validation test fees.

Some industry watchers have instead suggested that the deal is part of a strategy to attack VMware, currently the leading provider of virtualisation technology within datacentres.

Microsoft and Red Hat said that validations for their respective server virtualisation products are currently underway, and that the first results are expected later in the year.

See also:

children with computersInitiative will give computer access to millions of schoolchildren across the country  17 Feb 2009
DatacentreVeeam Backup 3.0 can protect infrastructure using a mix of VMware ESX and ESXi  17 Feb 2009
Register now for this web seminar hosted by Microsoft and Novell on driving datacentre agility through mixed source virtualisation  09 Feb 2009
Red Hat UK and Ireland regional director Phil AndrewsOn whether the open source vendor can capitalise on IT budgets being squeezed by taking significant software licensing costs out of the equation  04 Feb 2009

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Tags: Virtualisation, Datacentre, Operating-systems, Windows, Linux, Microsoft, Red-hat, Open-source, Software

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