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        Microsoft's Hyper-V To Be Integrated in OpenStack
        
        
        
        
		Microsoft today announced a partnership deal with Cloud.com to help integrate Microsoft's proprietary  hypervisor into the OpenStack project.
OpenStack was founded by hosting services provider Rackspace using code developed by NASA for its Nebula cloud  computing platform. The OpenStack project aims to pool open source  technologies to establish a standardized and scalable open cloud computing  platform. Cloud.com is one of more than 30 companies that have joined the  OpenStack effort and it will contribute the code for the Hyper-V integration  back to OpenStack. 
Under the deal, Microsoft will provide "architectural  and technical guidance to Cloud.com" for integrating the Hyper-V  hypervisor in OpenStack. The idea is that Hyper-V, which is part of Microsoft's  Windows Server 2008 R2 product, will allow organizations to tap Windows-based  technologies as well Linux-based ones. Cloud.com provides an open source cloud  solution that can be used for both public and private cloud efforts. 
The deal is part of Microsoft's general push into enabling  interoperability with open source solutions, which the company highlights here.  Microsoft also has a lab  project devoted to testing interoperability with non-Microsoft products. In  the case of OpenStack, that platform had not previously supported proprietary  technologies such as Hyper-V.
"The Hyper-V addition provides enterprise customers  running a mix of Microsoft and non-Microsoft technologies greater flexibility  when using OpenStack," stated Ted MacLean, general manager of Microsoft's  Open Solutions Group, in a Microsoft-produced  interview. "Until today, OpenStack only supported several open source  virtualization products."
Microsoft has never been friendly to open source software,  particularly with regard to patent claims. Lately, Microsoft has making the  headlines for suing mobile device makers over patents allegedly violated by the  Linux-based Android mobile operating system. However, Microsoft has tended to  draw the line on preserving interoperability options for companies using open source-based  servers. 
The best-known example of Microsoft enabling  interoperability with open source software is probably Microsoft's ongoing partnership  with Novell on Novell's SuSE Linux Enterprise operating system. That deal initially  generated controversy, but the controversy became accelerated when a Microsoft official  later claimed that Linux violated  235 of Microsoft's patents. Part of the SuSE Linux partnership is assuring  indemnity, or "intellectual  property peace of mind," for companies using SuSE Linux Enterprise.
Microsoft issued an "interoperability  pledge" in February of 2008 that likely resulted from past legal  skirmishes with other software companies trying to get their products to run on  Windows. The pledge opens up Microsoft's documentation and APIs to potential  software competitors to help enable interoperability.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.