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What Are Virtualization Concepts and Technologies

Virtualization is a key concept in IT and cloud computing that allows multiple virtual environments to operate on a single physical machine, enhancing efficiency and scalability. Key components include hypervisors, virtual machines, and resource allocation, with various technologies such as server, desktop, storage, network, application virtualization, and containerization. Benefits include cost savings, faster provisioning, improved resource utilization, and enhanced security.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
17 views2 pages

What Are Virtualization Concepts and Technologies

Virtualization is a key concept in IT and cloud computing that allows multiple virtual environments to operate on a single physical machine, enhancing efficiency and scalability. Key components include hypervisors, virtual machines, and resource allocation, with various technologies such as server, desktop, storage, network, application virtualization, and containerization. Benefits include cost savings, faster provisioning, improved resource utilization, and enhanced security.

Uploaded by

mihayyyd
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Virtualization is a foundational concept in modern IT and cloud computing that involves

creating a virtual version of something—such as hardware platforms, operating systems,


storage devices, or network resources. It allows multiple systems or environments to run on a
single physical machine, improving efficiency, flexibility, and scalability.

🔑 Key Virtualization Concepts

1. Hypervisor (Virtual Machine Monitor)


Software that enables virtualization by allowing multiple virtual machines (VMs) to
run on a single physical host.
o Type 1 (Bare-metal): Runs directly on hardware (e.g., VMware ESXi,
Microsoft Hyper-V, KVM).
o Type 2 (Hosted): Runs on a host OS (e.g., VMware Workstation, Oracle
VirtualBox).
2. Virtual Machine (VM)
A software-based emulation of a physical computer that runs an operating system and
applications just like a real machine.
3. Guest OS vs. Host OS
o Host OS: The operating system running on the physical machine.
o Guest OS: The OS installed inside a virtual machine.
4. Snapshots and Cloning
o Snapshots: Save the state of a VM at a particular point in time.
o Cloning: Creating exact copies of virtual machines.
5. Resource Allocation and Isolation
o Each VM gets its share of CPU, memory, disk, and network resources.
o VMs are isolated from one another, increasing security and stability.

⚙️Virtualization Technologies

1. Server Virtualization
Running multiple server instances on one physical machine.
o Examples: VMware vSphere, Microsoft Hyper-V, Citrix XenServer.
2. Desktop Virtualization
Users run desktop environments remotely.
o Examples: VMware Horizon, Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops.
3. Storage Virtualization
Abstracts physical storage into virtualized storage pools.
o Examples: VMware vSAN, IBM SAN Volume Controller.
4. Network Virtualization
Creates virtual networks independent of physical hardware.
o Examples: VMware NSX, Cisco ACI, SDN (Software Defined Networking).
5. Application Virtualization
Runs applications in a virtual environment, separate from the OS.
o Examples: Microsoft App-V, Citrix XenApp.
6. Containerization (a form of OS-level virtualization)
Lightweight, portable environments using shared OS kernel.
o Technologies: Docker, Kubernetes, LXC.

✅ Benefits of Virtualization

 Cost savings (less hardware needed)


 Faster provisioning and scaling
 Easier backup, recovery, and testing
 Improved resource utilization
 Enhanced security through isolation

Would you like a visual diagram or table comparing these technologies?

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