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Citrix-XenSource deal raises open source questions

Citrix-XenSource deal raises open source questions

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 16 Aug 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The virtualization market may get some stronger competition, but developers may resent the technology being co-opted by a larger conglomerate of proprietary company. Gartner, Novell and others react

Citrix Systems’ US$500 million acquisition of XenSource, along with VMware’s massively successful IPO earlier this week, has further legitimatized the hot virtualization space, but it may also be causing some disillusionment among the open source community.

XenSource commercializes the open source Xen virtualization software, a free virtual machine monitor. It can be delivered as a virtualization platform, as found in the XenEnterprise product, or embedded in a host operating system, such as Novell’s Suse Linux Enterprise 10 or Red Hat's RHEL 5/Fedora 7.

Gartner analyst George Weiss said that XenSource chief Peter Levine has to make a concerted effort in order to retain the loyalty of the open source Xen developers. Otherwise, he said, the open source community may look at the future of the Xen project destiny with too much uncertainty to continue supporting it.

“The possible downside here is the open source community might see that technology being co-opted by a larger conglomerate of proprietary company that may use the open source as a vehicle toward the financial gains and monetary rewards of this Citrix-XenSource company,” Weiss said.

Weiss said that the move could even cause companies such as Red Hat and Novell toward alternative technologies, such as Santa Clara, Calif.-based Qumranet’s Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM), a Linux kernel infrastructure for supporting virtualization.

“KVM now appears to be the only unaffiliated project for virtualization that isn’t beholden to any commercial organization,” Weiss said. “KVM is not dependant on anybody other than its own developers, and that’s the way XenSource would like Xen to appear. But if there’s any further gains by KVM, organizations will start to look to it as an alternative.”

Weiss said that both Citrix and XenSource have to continue to invite community participation and rewards to maintain the buildup for the Xen Hypervisor ecosystem in order to avoid that scenario.

But according to Novell Canada CTO/CIO Ross Chevalier, the acquisition will not jeopardize the Xen project. He said the acquisition reaffirmed its commitment that virtualization with Xen is an important tool for businesses and Novell will continue to have faith in the project.

“Our contribution from the word ‘go’ has been to the open source Xen project and that will be our whole and complete focus,” Chevalier said. “XenSource is now going to go build some stuff that will become licenced products using the Xen architecture and that’s great for them. But our commitment is to the Xen project.”

Chevalier also affirmed that Novell’s Suse Linux 10 wasn’t created in a vacuum or by any single vendor.

“The work we do becomes part of the community release, and if we do a great implementation of those tool sets and we provide great support, then that’s our value proposition,” Chevalier said. “But if you go closed, well then you’ve just got yet another propriety implementation.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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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,

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