AMD live migrates KVM virtual machines from Intel CPUs to its own

Posted by Alessandro Perilli   |   Monday, November 10, 2008   |   3 Comments

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At the end of last week AMD announced a breakthrough achievement: migrating a running virtual machine from a virtualization platform to another, each running different CPU brands.

Despite many progresses in this area (AMD-V Extended Migration and Intel Flex Migration), so far the only thing possible was to live migrate VMs between different CPU families of the same vendor.
AMD and Intel never cooperated as much to cross such boundary and in one case we are pretty sure that an Intel executive said that the thing would be unlikely to happen.

Now AMD has found a way to mask the CPU information and operate the migration from an Intel Xeon DP Quad Core E5420 to its own forthcoming 45nm Quad-Core Opteron.
To achieve the goal the company worked together with Red Hat so everybody would expect that the migration happened through Xen hypervisors. It’s not the case.

Red Hat fully embraced KVM as replacement of Xen in June and this is the virtualization platform that was used for the demo:

 

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3 Comments

Blogger Henning Sprang Monday, November 10, 2008 3:31:00 PM  
Funny that a world-wide large business realizes that only now - I already reported such findings after a virtualization workshop here in Germany in August: http://lazyb0y.blogspot.com/2008/08/report-from-virtualization-workshop-at.html
Even with different bitness - just one-way (while the amd report doesn't mention two-way migrations explicitly).
Anonymous Simon Crosby Wednesday, November 12, 2008 4:25:00 AM  
Xen has had this for over a year. Guess Red Hat just woke up to that fact.
Anonymous Sam Wednesday, November 12, 2008 7:08:00 PM  
What management console are they using for managing those hosts. I have never seen that one before

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