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Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization

You're reading from   Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Leverage powerful Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization solutions to build your own IaaS cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782167402
Length 178 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Pradeep Subramaniaan Pradeep Subramaniaan
Author Profile Icon Pradeep Subramaniaan
Pradeep Subramaniaan
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Overview of Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing RHEV Manager and Hypervisor Hosts 3. Setting Up the RHEV Virtual Infrastructure 4. Creating and Managing Virtual Machines 5. Virtual Machine and Host High Availability 6. Advanced Storage and Networking Features 7. Quota and User Management 8. Managing a Virtualization Environment from the Command Line 9. Troubleshooting RHEV 10. Setting Up iSCSI, NFS, and IdM Directory Services for RHEV Index

The virtualization overview

Hardware virtualization or platform virtualization allows multiple operating system instances to run concurrently on a single computer. This is a means of separating hardware from a single operating system. A hypervisor or Virtual Machine Monitor (VMM) is a piece of computer software that runs on host machine, which will allow you to create and manage the virtual machine on top of the host. The hypervisor virtualizes all resources (for example, processors, memory, storage, and networks) and allocates them to the various virtual machines that run on top of the hypervisor. In general, physical hardware that runs the hypervisor software is called the host machine and the virtual machine is called the guest operating system.

Consider an example of a computer that is running a production application server on Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The developer needs to test and implement new features. In a typical scenario without any virtualization, there will be dedicated physical hardware for the production and development environment. Virtualization allows you to run both production and development instances of your application in complete isolation from one another on the same physical hardware. As the virtualization hypervisor software sits between the guest and the hardware, it can control the guests' use of CPU, memory, storage, and network between these two environments.

You have been reading a chapter from
Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization
Published in: Sep 2014
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781782167402
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