Sun is delivering on its promise, made last October, to roll out a new
form of virtualisation, which it is calling logical domains or LDoms.
According to Sun, logical domains are a different approach to
virtualisation than Solaris Containers, which are OS-level virtual
machines and were introduced along with Solaris 10. Instead, Sun
blogger Tony Kay described them as "a hypervisor-based technology on Sun's CMT platforms, today the T1000 and T2000 platforms.
"Architecturally there are some fundamental similarities between LDoms
and x86-based hypervisors such as VMware's ESX and Xen," he said.
The partitions are handled directly by Sun's T1 UltraSparc (Niagara)
CPUs through the Sun4V hypervisor, with a current limitation to maximum
32 fully isolated domains (on eight-core CPUs). In other words, they're
closer in concept to VMware's hardware-level virtualisation system,
which centres around the ESX Server hypervisor.
According to Sun's white paper, Beginners Guide to LDoms: Understanding and Deploying Logical Domains,
the technology offers benefits similar to other hardware-level
virtualisation systems. It allows users "to allocate a systems various
resources, such as memory, CPUs, and devices, into logical groupings
and create multiple, discrete systems, each with their own operating
system, resources, and identity within a single computer system."
The white paper said that "a logical domains environment can help
achieve greater resource usage, better scaling, and increased security
and isolation."
Sun sees LDoms fitting between OS-level virtualisation and its
dynamic system domains, where virtual machines are electrically
isolated by the Sparc CPU.
It's unclear whether you'll only be able to run Solaris, or whether Sun
will allow other OSes to be run. To do so, however, it would probably
need to develop CPU emulation technology, which it's shown no signs of
doing.
The software is currently in release candidate 3 state and is
available for download free. But although the company said it will
release the technology free, customers will have to pay for a support
contract.
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