Linux Virtualization Concepts: Difference between revisions

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Xen can do [[Virtualization Concepts#Full_Virtualization|full virtualization]] on systems that support [[Virtualization_Concepts#Hardware_Virtualization_Extensions|virtualization extensions]], but can also work as hypervisor on the machines that don't.
Xen can do [[Virtualization Concepts#Full_Virtualization|full virtualization]] on systems that support [[Virtualization_Concepts#Hardware_Virtualization_Extensions|virtualization extensions]], but can also work as hypervisor on the machines that don't.
=Quick Emulator (QEMU)=


=libvirt=
=libvirt=

Revision as of 20:44, 23 June 2017

External

Internal

Generic Virtualization Concepts

Virtualization Concepts

Virtualization Solutions from Red Hat

RHEL 7 includes a hypervisor and a number of virtualization tools, which allows running guest operating systems, so it can function as a virtualization platform. However, the solution supports a limited number of guests per host and a limited range of guest types. Red Hat Virtualization is an enterprise virtualization solution based on the KVM technology, offering more features than Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Red Hat OpenStack Platform support OpenStack clouds.

KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine)

KVM is a hypervisor that only runs on systems with hardware supporting virtualization extensions. It is built into the standard RHEL 7 kernel, and it can run Linux, Windows, Solaris and BSD guests. KVM is integrated with the Quick Emulator (QEMU).

Xen

Xen can do full virtualization on systems that support virtualization extensions, but can also work as hypervisor on the machines that don't.

Quick Emulator (QEMU)

libvirt

Storage and Virtualization

Networking and Virtualization

Security and Virtualization

KVM virtual machines use SELinux and sVirt to enforce security.

sVirt

sVirt is a technology included in RHEL 7 to integrate SELinux and virtualization. It applies Mandatory Access Control (MAC) to improve security when using virtual machines.

Steal Time

"Steal time" is the percentage of time a virtual CPU waits for real CPU while the hypervisor is servicing another virtual processor.

A high value means the physical CPU is overcommitted and more physical CPU should be allocated to the environment - or the VM should be moved on a different physical server. The steal time is reported by vmstat st.