What is Virtualization?
Virtualization is a proven software technology that is
rapidly transforming the IT landscape and fundamentally changing the way
that people compute.
Today’s powerful x86 computer hardware was originally designed to run only a
single operating system and a single application, but virtualization breaks
that bond, making it possible to run multiple operating systems and multiple
applications on the same computer at the same time, increasing the
utilization and flexibility of hardware.
Virtualization is a technology that can benefit anyone who uses a computer, from IT professionals and Mac enthusiasts to commercial businesses and government organizations. Join the millions of people around the world who use virtualization to save time, money and energy while achieving more with the computer hardware they already own.
How Does Virtualization Work?
In essence, virtualization lets you transform hardware
into software. Use software such as VMware ESX Server to transform or “virtualize”
the hardware resources of an x86-based computer—including the CPU, RAM, hard
disk and network controller—to create a fully functional virtual machine
that can run its own operating system and applications just like a “real”
computer.
Multiple virtual machines share hardware resources without interfering with
each other so that you can safely run several operating systems and
applications at the same time on a single computer.
The VMware Approach to Virtualization
The VMware approach to virtualization inserts a thin layer
of software directly on the computer hardware or on a host operating system.
This software layer creates virtual machines and contains a virtual machine
monitor or “hypervisor” that allocates hardware resources dynamically and
transparently so that multiple operating systems can run concurrently on a
single physical computer without even knowing it.
However, virtualizing a single physical computer is just the beginning.
VMware offers a robust virtualization platform that can scale across
hundreds of interconnected physical computers and storage devices to form an
entire virtual infrastructure.




