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Ars Technica posted a story that Microsoft is teaming up with the OpenNebula project to create infrastructure-as-a-service clouds combining open source software and Microsofts Hyper-V virtualization platform.



But supporting Linux isnt really enough. Virtualization is increasingly being used by businesses to deploy Amazon-like infrastructure clouds within their own data centers, using a mix of hypervisors and cloud automation software. OpenNebula, cloud software released under the Apache License, was already supported by VMware, Xen, and KVM, but not by Hyper-V. That will change in mid-October when a prototype of the Hyper-V and OpenNebula integration components will be released under the Apache license, says OpenNebula project director Ignacio Llorente.

Microsoft is providing support and technical guidance to [the] OpenNebula open-source project to add and maintain Hyper-V on the list of officially supported hypervisors, Llorente writes. The integration will support both variants of Hyper-V, namely in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1. Disk images will be managed using a shared storage server (e.g. SAN) and standard POSIX calls from the OpenNebula server. OpenNebula will additionally leverage the networking management functionality provided by Hyper-V. The integration will not require the installation of new services in the nodes, making [it] quite simple and rapid to build an OpenNebula cloud on existing Hyper-V deployments.
  Microsoft to hook Hyper-V into open source cloud platform