Top Resources
- Product Datasheet
- PVA 4.5 Datasheet
- User Guide (pdf)
- Introduction to OS Virtualization
- Fulfilling the Promise of Virtualization
- Analyst and Media Reports
Customer Spotlights
Business critical applications ran four times faster on Virtuozzo than on ESX Server. ”
Event
OS Virtualization
Parallels Virtuozzo OS virtualization architecture clearly delivered the platform solution we needed, helping us attain a 12X improvement in our migration process. ”
There are two types of virtualization on the market today. Hardware virtualization, or hypervisor, virtualizes at the hardware level creating a duplicate of all system resources such as operating system, CPU, memory and configuration files. This makes the common point of reference the hardware.
Multiple copies of system resources results in overhead on the server of up to 20%. Overhead reduces the ratios of virtual servers per physical server as well as overall system performance.
Virtualizing at the host operating system, Parallels Virtuozzo Containers provides a common virtualization layer that allocates system resources across all virtual servers, called containers. The result is a leaner, more efficient virtualization layer with an overhead of only 2%. This translates into higher ratios of virtual servers to physical servers, near-native server performance and unique advantages for management of the virtual environment. Some of these advantages include dynamic reallocation of resources and the ability to create links back to the server host operating system creating lightening fast management operations.
To learn more about OS virtualization or explore technical documentation, click here.



