Corporations should look at virtual appliances as a way to create a highly
customised platform to run their applications,
VMware co-founder and chief scientist
Mendel Rosenblum said in a keynote at Linuxworld in San Francisco.
Today's operating systems cater to a wide variety of applications and user
cases, which has lead to an explosion of the size of both Linux and Windows.
This in turn makes it hard to maintain the code, increasing the overall number
of bugs as well as the chance of security vulnerabilities remaining undetected.
Developers also have to optimise their applications for multiple operating
systems, which requires time and money.
Instead, Rosenblum recommended, developers should consider creating a custom
operating system.
"Rather than making your application run on a bunch of different operating
systems, you choose one operating system. You bundle it together and you ship
this thing around as a virtual appliance," Rosenblum said.
Linux is the ideal candidate to run these virtual appliances because the
operating system is free and open source.
An application-specific operating system doesn't just cut back on the
potential number of bugs and security flaws. Developers can also add features
that increase the software's performance.
Several companies are currently selling virtual appliances. Database vendor
Ingress for instance is shipping a virtual appliance based on a specialised
Linux distribution that is maintained by rPath.
In June Middleware maker BEA started shipping its WebLogic Server Virtual
Edition, a virtual version of its Java
application server that allows users to quickly add compute power to Java
applications that are part of a Service Oriented Architecture.
The jury on virtual appliances however is still out, because each customised
Linux version is essentially a fork.
Red Hat for instance in May started
shipping what it referred to as a database appliance running the Sybase
database. The partnership, however, was a straightforward software bundling
agreement and didn't involve a customised version of Red Hat Linux optimised for
the database.
"We won't compromise the reason people go to open source and Linux in the
first place, which is to have a platform that is well tested and developed by
the community," Scott Crenshaw, Red Hat's vice president for Enterprise Linux
said at the time.
"There are lines that have to be drawn to optimise the security and quality.
You can expect a great degree of customisation to be available, but not the
creation of a Linux fork."
Rosenblum expects that there will be a degree of standardization around
software appliances that prevents an explosion of Linux distributions for which
developers have to develop patches and updates and that requires hardware
certification.
In addition to specialised companies such as rPath, existing Linux vendors
could also create customisable versions of their distributions that can be
tweaked for certain applications, VMware suggested.
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