Welcome to Linux-VServer.org Linux-VServer provides virtualization for GNU/Linux systems. This is accomplished by kernel level isolation. It allows to run multiple virtual units at once. Those units are sufficiently isolated to guarantee the required security, but utilize available resources efficiently, as they run on the same kernel. This site contains information relating to the use and development of virtual servers based on Linux-VServer. This particular virtual server model is implemented through a combination of "security contexts", segmented routing, chroot, extended quotas and some other standard tools. Note: If this isn't what you are looking for, maybe Linux Virtual Server is.
SUSE Studio is a free, web-based service designed to build virtual appliances, such as pre-installed hardware-appliances, or "software appliances" -- pre-configured Linux server stacks suitable for installation by users on real or virtual commodity hardware. Recently released from beta, SUSE Studio can produce appliance images in raw disk image, Live CD/DVD iso, VMware, and Xen formats, and there are plans in the works for supporting Amazon's EC2 ami format, says the review by our sister publication, eWEEK.
The "Virtual Machine Manager" application (virt-manager for short package name) is a desktop user interface for managing virtual machines. It presents a summary view of running domains, their live performance
Virtual Bridges partners with IBM and Canonical for Microsoft-free “Desktops in the Cloud” This groundbreaking partnership combines the most popular Linux distribution, Ubuntu, with the IBM suite of enterprise-class applications and services, including Symphony, Sametime and Notes, together with Virtual Bridges’ end-to-end, top-to-bottom pure Linux-based VDI offering, VERDE (Virtual Enterprise Remote Desktop Environment).
Migrating SLES from VMWare ESX to XenServer For SuSE Linux Enterprise Server I require a “Helper” virtual machine to mount and repair the file system. This is because SLES recovery console does not include an editor. After migrating SuSE and booting the boot loader fails at: “waiting for device /dev/sda2.” This is as expected because /sda refers to a SCSI bus and on XenServer SuSE actually sees an /hda (IDE) boot device.
The newest version of the open source Xen hypervisor has been released, and it features input from some of the industry's largest hardware and software players. The new release boasts better performance and scalability and is designed to work on supercomputers, smartphones and everything in between.