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Xen

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The '''xen''' system is a form of virtualisation that enables a host system to run many different operating systems.  These hosted operating systems are referred to as guests and can be from different vendors and include Microsoft's Windows platforms and many [[GNU/Linux]] distributions.
 
The '''xen''' system is a form of virtualisation that enables a host system to run many different operating systems.  These hosted operating systems are referred to as guests and can be from different vendors and include Microsoft's Windows platforms and many [[GNU/Linux]] distributions.
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The Xen system was bought by Citrix and is sold under the [http://citrix.com/English/ps2/products/product.asp?contentID=683148 XenServer] brand name.  The open source code remains available from the [http://www.xen.org/ official website].
  
 
Work is in progress to enable FreeBSD to run natively on xen using the 'enlightened' paravirtualisation method.
 
Work is in progress to enable FreeBSD to run natively on xen using the 'enlightened' paravirtualisation method.
  
 
It is currently possible to run FreeBSD for i386 (32-bit) and amd64 (64-bit) using the hardware-assisted virtualisation instructions found on newer AMD and Intel processors.  This ability came out with the XenServer 5.0 and Xen 3.2 releases (this was tested by the [[User:DrModiford|author]] using the official FreeBSD 7.0 current ISO releases).
 
It is currently possible to run FreeBSD for i386 (32-bit) and amd64 (64-bit) using the hardware-assisted virtualisation instructions found on newer AMD and Intel processors.  This ability came out with the XenServer 5.0 and Xen 3.2 releases (this was tested by the [[User:DrModiford|author]] using the official FreeBSD 7.0 current ISO releases).

Latest revision as of 04:17, 23 September 2008

The xen system is a form of virtualisation that enables a host system to run many different operating systems. These hosted operating systems are referred to as guests and can be from different vendors and include Microsoft's Windows platforms and many GNU/Linux distributions.

The Xen system was bought by Citrix and is sold under the XenServer brand name. The open source code remains available from the official website.

Work is in progress to enable FreeBSD to run natively on xen using the 'enlightened' paravirtualisation method.

It is currently possible to run FreeBSD for i386 (32-bit) and amd64 (64-bit) using the hardware-assisted virtualisation instructions found on newer AMD and Intel processors. This ability came out with the XenServer 5.0 and Xen 3.2 releases (this was tested by the author using the official FreeBSD 7.0 current ISO releases).

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