Virtualization News Desk
Citrix Unveils Project Kensho for Creation of Hypervisor-Independent Virtualization Application Workloads
New Tools to Showcase Open Virtual Machine Format for Multi-Hypervisor Management
Jul. 21, 2008 11:45 AM
Citrix Systems announced “Project Kensho,” which will
deliver Open Virtual Machine Format (OVF) tools that allow independent software
vendors (ISVs) and enterprise IT managers to create hypervisor-independent,
portable enterprise application workloads. These tools will allow application
workloads to be imported and run across Citrix XenServer, Microsoft Windows
Server 2008 Hyper-V and VMware ESX virtual environments.
As virtualization becomes a mainstream component of
enterprise IT infrastructure, users need ways to automate and secure the
lifecycle of their application workloads without being tied to a single
hypervisor platform or virtual hard disk format. By implementing the
Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) OVF standard, Project Kensho will
enable ISVs and enterprise IT staff to leverage a hypervisor-independent
portable virtual machine format that packages a complete application workload
as a secure, portable, pre-configured open standard virtual appliance. This
will solve a multitude of interoperability issues between virtualization
platforms while allowing automated provisioning and management of applications,
rather than just virtual machines. Users will be able to easily install and use
any OVF packaged application workload regardless of which virtualization
platform they use – whether it be XenServer, Hyper-V, or ESX.
“XenServer delivers the benefits of fast, free, ubiquitous
and compatible virtualization, whether from Citrix, Microsoft or VMware,” said
Simon Crosby, CTO of the Virtualization and Management Division, Citrix
Systems. “Project Kensho highlights the Citrix commitment to interoperability
for virtualization, while maximizing price/performance and richness of features
at the virtual infrastructure level.”
The OVF specification was originally co-authored by Citrix
and VMware, with contributions from Dell, HP, IBM and Microsoft. The companies
then jointly submitted the draft to the DMTF standardization process.
Added Value for Microsoft Hyper-V
Project Kensho will also enable customers to leverage the
interoperability benefits and compatibility between long-time partners Citrix
and Microsoft to extend the Microsoft platform. For example, XenServer is
enhanced with CIM-based management APIs to allow any DMTF-compliant management
tool to manage XenServer, including Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine
Manager. And because the tools are based on a standards framework, customers
are ensured a rich ecosystem of options for virtualization. In addition,
because of the open-standard format and special licensing features in OVF,
customers can seamlessly move their current virtualized workloads to either
XenServer or Hyper-V, enabling them to distribute virtual workloads to the
platform of choice while simultaneously ensuring compliance with the underlying
licensing requirements for each virtual appliance.
Project Kensho will support the vision of the Citrix Delivery
Center product family,
helping customers transform static datacenters into dynamic “delivery centers”
for the best performance, security, cost savings and business agility. The
tools developed through Project Kensho will be integrated into Citrix Workflow
Studio based orchestrations, for example, to provide an automated, environment
for managing the import and export of applications from any major
virtualization platform.
About Virtualization News DeskSYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.