News
Ubuntu's Hardy Heron Takes Virtualization Flight
Ubuntu's New "Long Term Support (LTS)" Rev was Released with the Promise that Another LTS Rev Would Follow Every Two Years
May. 20, 2008 05:45 PM
Ubuntu’s first “Long Term Support (LTS)” rev in almost 23
months was pushed out the door this week along with the promise that another
LTS rev would follow every two years from now on out and in between there would
be point releases first at the three-month mark and then every six month after
that.
Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth borrowed Intel’s “Tick
Tock” metaphor to explain Ubuntu’s plans.
The only thing that would upset the planned schedule, he
said, would be if other major distributions aligned their releases.
Ubuntu first experimented with an LTS platform two years ago
when its Dapper Drake release, a k a Ubuntu 6.06, came out and it swore that it
was stable enough for Canonical, Ubuntu’s commercializer, to support and
maintain the thing for the next three years, a marketing gimmick that appears
to have worked.
Canonical claims its track record of delivering a commercial
operating system – on schedule – every six months is “unique.”
Shuttleworth gloated over the superior predictability of
open source software compared to Microsoft.
The new release, Ubuntu 8.04 or Hardy Heron, is supposed to
be fit for large-scale desktop deployment and enterprise use in the face of
widespread rejection of Linux on the desktop.
Three-year support makes for longer corporate upgrade
planning cycles. Otherwise the next Ubuntu 8.10 will be out in October.
Canonical is now looking for greater ISV support besides IBM
with its DB2 and Lotus Domino, Adobe, Google, RealNetworks, Skype, Corel and
Parallels.
The desktop distribution adds the beta of Firefox 3, an
enhanced default photo manager, music sharing and better video and TV support.
Canonical is generally associated with the desktop but it
has a companion server distribution that it’s pushing to compete with Red Hat
and Novell.
Both the Heron desktop and server are LTS revs, but the
server is supposed to be good for five years.
With this iteration, Ubuntu is dropping support for Sparc as
before it dropped Power. Sparc is a Solaris play, Shuttleworth said, although
the relationship between Canonical and Sun as warmer to the point Sun is
certifying the operating system on some of its x86 machines such as the Sun
Fire X2100 M2, the X2200 M2 and the X4150.
Ubuntu has yet to persuade a server maker to pre-install the
stuff and Dell and HP, the largest of the x86 houses, have yet to even certify
the widgetry.
The Server Edition adds KVM for hosting virtualization and
the cut-down Ubuntu JeOS (Just Enough Operating System) for virtual appliances
supports both VMware and KVM.
Likewise is providing integration with Microsoft’s Active
Directory and Heron is the first release to include Sun’s OpenJDK as an option.
Java has traditionally run on top of Linux. Shuttleworth
said OpenJDK is integrated.
The code is also described as having expanded network
infrastructure support such as authentication from FreeRadius, monitoring from
Munin, VPN complements of OpenVPN and backup from Bacula.
There is also supposed to be increased storage capabilities
including iSCSI and DRDB and enhanced security thanks to integrated AppArmor
policies and kernel hardening.
See http://www,ubuntu.com/download.
About Maureen O'GaraMaureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025. Twitter: @MaureenOGara