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BlueStacks (also known as BlueStacks by now.gg, Inc.) is a chain of cloud-based cross-platform products developed by the San Francisco-based company of the same name. The BlueStacks App Player enables the execution of Android applications on computers running Microsoft Windows or macOS .
BlueStacks has developed an App Player for Windows and MacOS capable of running Android applications in a container. The SPURV compatibility layer [9] is a similar project developed by Collabora. Waydroid also uses Android in an LXC container on a regular Linux system, using Wayland. [10] Wine - A Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems.
VMware ESXi Server 5.5 (vSphere) Yes, add-on, up to 64 way No Yes Virtualization: Server consolidation, service continuity, dev/test, cloud computing, business critical applications, Infrastructure as a Service IaaS: Up to near native [citation needed] Yes VMware ESX Server 4.0 (vSphere) Yes, add-on, up to 8 way Yes Yes Virtualization
A system virtual machine (also called SYS-VM [citation needed]) is a virtual machine (VM) that provides a complete system platform and supports the execution of a complete operating system (OS). [1]
User Beancounters is a set of per-container counters, limits, and guarantees, meant to prevent a single container from monopolizing system resources. In current OpenVZ kernels (RHEL6-based 042stab*) there are two primary parameters, and others are optional. [5]
Android x86 (ver. 4.0) on EeePC 701 4G. Android-x86 is an open source project that makes an unofficial porting of the Android mobile operating system developed by the Open Handset Alliance to run on devices powered by x86 processors, rather than RISC-based ARM chips.
Container clusters need to be managed. This includes functionality to create a cluster, to upgrade the software or repair it, balance the load between existing instances, scale by starting or stopping instances to adapt to the number of users, to log activities and monitor produced logs or the application itself by querying sensors.
ZeroVM is an open source light-weight virtualization and sandboxing technology. It virtualizes a single process using the Google Native Client platform. Since only a single process is virtualized (instead of a full operating system), the startup overhead is in the order of 5 ms.