A
virtual machine (VM) is a software implementation of a computing environment in
which an operating system (OS) or program can be installed and run.
The
virtual machine typically emulates a physical computing environment, but
requests for CPU, memory, hard disk, network and other hardware resources are
managed by a virtualization layer which translates these requests to the
underlying physical hardware.
VMs
are created within a virtualization layer, such as a hypervisor or a
virtualization platform that runs on top of a client or server operating
system. This operating system is known as the host OS. The virtualization layer
can be used to create many individual, isolated VM environments.
Typically,
guest operating systems and programs are not aware that they are running on a
virtual platform and, as long as the VM's virtual platform is supported, this
software can be installed in the same way it would be deployed to physical
server hardware. For example, the guest OS might appear to have a physical hard
disk attached to it, but actual I/O requests are translated by the
virtualization layer so they actually occur against a file that is accessible
by the host OS.
Virtual
machines can provide numerous advantages over the installation of OS's and
software directly on physical hardware. Isolation ensures that applications and
services that run within a VM cannot interfere with the host OS or other VMs. VMs
can also be easily moved, copied, and reassigned between host servers to
optimize hardware resource utilization. Administrators can also take advantage
of virtual environments to simply backups, disaster recovery, new deployments
and basic system administration tasks. The use of virtual machines also comes
with several important management considerations, many of which can be
addressed through general systems administration best practices and tools that
are designed to managed VMs.
Note:
This entry refers to the term virtual machine (VM) as it applies to
virtualization technology which creates independent environments for use by
operating systems and applications which are designed to run directly on server
or client hardware. Numerous other technologies, such as programming languages
and environments, also use the same concepts and also use the term
"virtual machine".
refereed from http://searchservervirtualization.techtarget.com
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