SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Data Centre

Citrix to acquire XenSource for US$500 million

Citrix to acquire XenSource for US$500 million

By:  China Martens  On: 14 Aug 2007 For: IDG News Service Creator

The application delivery software vendor enters both the server and desktop virtualization markets by buying the open source alternative to VMware. Executives discuss how the two will fit

Citrix Systems Inc. plans to acquire virtualization vendor XenSource Inc. for approximately US$500 million to enable the application delivery software vendor to enter both the server and desktop virtualization markets.

Citrix made the announcement on Wednesday, the day after XenSource's rival VMware Inc. launched an initial public offering.

Virtualization, first used in mainframes, has become very popular in recent years as the technology's been applied to servers. Virtualization enables companies to cut down on the number of the computers they use by allowing each machine to function as a number of virtual machines running different operating systems. Rumors had been circulating over the past few days that Citrix would buy XenSource, which both provides commercial and open-source flavors of its virtualization technologies.

Already, the boards of directors of both Citrix and XenSource have approved the deal. The purchase is subject to regulatory conditions and Citrix expects to close it in the middle of the fourth quarter of 2007, according to David Henshall, chief financial officer at Citrix.

The two companies have complementary product lines, Mark Templeton, president and CEO of Citrix, said during a morning conference call. "In short, XenSource and Citrix are a perfect fit," he added.

Citrix hopes to generate over $50 million in revenue through XenSource's virtualization products by 2008, he said, and then take a significant share of the overall virtualization market by 2011.

John Sloan, a senior analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research, said the acquisition makes good strategic sense for Citrix and will ensure there’s a credible alternative to VMware.

“The context here, I think is the hypervisor layer that hosts virtual machines is going to become very much a sort of commodity play,” he said. “What differentiates you in that space is going to be the management tools – to create, manage and support virutal infrastructure. When they’re buying XenSource, they’re buying that suite of tools.”

XenSource bills itself as "the open source virtualization company," with strong Red Hat and Novell partnerships, while Citrix has for the most part avoided the open source market,working with Microsoft in the areas of Windows application delivery, application networking and branch office infrastructure. In a recent interview with ComputerWorld Canada, David Wright, the company’s Canadian area vice-president, suggested that wasn't going to change anytime soon.

"We're really strongly focused on Microsoft," he said. "We're not being asked a lot about (open source).

XenSource remains committed to ensuring interoperability between its own virtualization products and Microsoft's virtualization hypervisor, currently code-named "Viridian," according to XenSource CEO Peter Levine. Once Microsoft releases Viridian, XenSource will build dynamic virtualization services on top of the hypervisor in the same way that it's built its current offerings on the Xen hypervisor, he said. "We'll be able to offer a choice -- platform virtualization based on Xen or a solution based on Viridian," Levine added. "We fully expect to drive revenue out of both of those markets."


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: server, storage












Print |  Views: 603   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




China Martens China Martens is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

The Demo: Citrix's Xen Desktop
The Demo: Citrix's Xen DesktopAs the VMworld conference gets under way in Las Vegas this week, one of its virtualization rivals shows how the technology could be applied to better manage an enterprise PC fleet
Shopping Cart: Virtualization
Shopping Cart: VirtualizationVMWare's ThinApp manages plug and play apps, and its Desktop Manager 2.1 is a virtual desktop connection broker. visionapp AG's Server Management lets IT departments manage large Citrix and Windows Terminal Server environments
Splunk takes Google-like approach to virtual sprawl
Splunk takes Google-like approach to virtual sprawlAn IT services firm launches a management tool that would help customers search their data centre for problems relating to Citrix XenServer, guest operating systems and other applications. Why the physical layer can't be ignored
Suddenly, Citrix isn't so boring anymore
they've made a few acquisitions, but i wouldn't have pegged citrix as the likely contender to buy xensource,
blog comments powered by Disqus