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Rubrik: World-wide News/Products & News Novell
Announces SUSE Appliance Program Novell
Also Announces Beta Availability of SUSE Linux Enterprise JeOS; Enterprise-Caliber (23.04.08)
- Novell announced the creation of the SUSE Appliance Program to enable
independent software vendors (ISVs) to create appliances combining their
applications with the SUSE Linux Enterprise platform in one integrated
package for end-customer deployment. Novell also announced the beta release
of SUSE Linux Enterprise JeOS, a minimized version of the award-winning SUSE
Linux Enterprise platform that ISVs can use as a platform for creating
appliances. As a result, ISVs will realize simplified application deployment
and support while dramatically reducing development costs and easing
deployment of applications by end customers.
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"IDC believes software appliances will play an important role in the future of application deploy-ments," said Al Gillen, research vice president, System Software, at IDC. "Software appliances empower ISVs to deliver a fully configured, optimized software stack that incorporates the operating system, lower-level infrastructure products and applications in a unified, easily managed package. This emerging form factor ensures seamless interaction between the operating system and the application, and directly leverages the virtual infrastructure that customers are putting in place today. We expect the endorsement of major operating systems vendors such as Novell will help accelerate both the awareness and the adoption of software appliances." The SUSE
Appliance Program will enable ISVs to bundle their applications with
customized versions of the SUSE Linux Enterprise platform and to deliver the
bundle as a software appliance, which can be run natively on x86-based
hardware, or as a virtual appliance, which includes a paravirtualized kernel
designed to deliver optimal performance in a virtualized environment. Virtual
appliances built in the SUSE Appliance Program will run on customers' choice
of hypervisor, including Xen, VMware ESX and Microsoft Hyper-V, as both a
paravirtualized and fully virtualized guest. Through
the SUSE Appliance Program, Novell will collaborate with ISVs to develop the
technology necessary to deliver applications in appliance format. IDC
estimates the appliance market will be nearly 700 million Dollar in 2011. In
the coming months, Novell will release several new components of the SUSE
Appliance Program, including a new automated tool to build appliances. Nat
Friedman, chief technology and strategy officer for open source at Novell,
said, "Virtualization and the appliance model are simplifying the task
of distributing applications to end customers. We've heard from multiple ISVs
that they want to deploy their application in an appliance. Our SUSE Linux
Enterprise JeOS release is a perfect platform for creating and distributing
ISV applications. With today's announcement of the beta release of SUSE Linux
Enterprise JeOS and an accompanying early adopter program, we are inviting
ISVs to try SUSE Linux Enterprise JeOS and help us build the perfect platform
and practices for appliance deployment." Just enough Operating System SUSE
Linux Enterprise JeOS - or "just enough operating system" - is a
minimized edition of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server which ISVs can use as a
starting point for developing appliances. SUSE Linux Enterprise JeOS is built
from the same codebase as SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, and applications
certified to run on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server will carry that
certification onto the JeOS platform, as well. As a result, ISVs can more
easily support the complete appliance for their enterprise customers. In
addition, Novell announced today it will officially participate in the
LimeJeOS project, which is an existing community-led project building a
minimized version of the openSUSE Linux distribution. The term
JeOS refers to a customized operating system that precisely fits the needs of
a particular application. The application's OS requirements can be determined
manually or with an analytical tool. JeOS includes only the pieces of an
operating system required to support a particular application and any other
third-party components contained in the appliance. This makes the appliance
more efficient, smaller, more secure and higher performing than an
application running under a full, general-purpose operating system. A key
component of the SUSE Appliance Program, the beta release of SUSE Linux
Enterprise JeOS is available in several virtual image formats, including
VMware VMDK, Xen and as a raw hard disk image. A Microsoft VHD format of SUSE
Linux Enterprise JeOS is planned for release later this year after Microsoft
releases Hyper-V. (Novell: ra) |
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