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The Solaris operating system provides man pages for Solaris Containers by default; more detailed documentation can be found at various on-line technical resources. The first published document and hands-on reference for Solaris Zones was written in February 2004 by Dennis Clarke at Blastwave, providing the essentials to getting started.
^ Exceptional for lightweight, paravirtualized, single-user VM/CMS interactive shell: largest customers run several thousand users on even single prior models. For multiprogramming OSes like Linux on IBM Z and z/OS that make heavy use of native supervisor state instructions, performance will vary depending on nature of workload but is near native.
Desktop-VMS was a short-lived distribution of VAX/VMS sold with VAXstation systems. It consisted of a single CD-ROM containing a bundle of VMS, DECwindows, DECnet, VAXcluster support, and a setup process designed for non-technical users. [38] [39] Desktop-VMS could either be run directly from the CD or could be installed onto a hard drive. [40]
OS-level virtualization is an operating system (OS) virtualization paradigm in which the kernel allows the existence of multiple isolated user space instances, including containers (LXC, Solaris Containers, AIX WPARs, HP-UX SRP Containers, Docker, Podman), zones (Solaris Containers), virtual private servers (), partitions, virtual environments (VEs), virtual kernels (DragonFly BSD), and jails ...
Can automatically run VMs on host system startup (except on Windows hosts) 4.3 Oct 15, 2013: VM video-capture support; Host touch device support (GUI passes host touch events to guest)/USB virtualization of such devices; 5.0 Jul 9, 2015: Paravirtualization support for Windows and Linux guests to improve time-keeping accuracy and performance
Oracle VM Server for x86 is a server virtualization offering from Oracle Corporation.Oracle VM Server for x86 incorporates the free and open-source Xen hypervisor technology, supports Windows, Linux, and Solaris [3] guests and includes an integrated Web based management console.
The only operating system supported by the vendor for running within logical domains is Solaris 10 11/06 and later updates, and all Solaris 11 releases. There are operating systems that are not officially supported, but may still be capable of running within logical domains: Debian ports [12] version; OpenSolaris 2009.06; Illumos-derived releases
Emulation of those specific z/VM features for OpenSolaris is included starting with Hercules Version 3.07. Certain unencumbered editors and utilities which can run on a mainframe without a parent operating system may be available to run on Hercules as well. Debian GNU/Linux running on Hercules