Kyma Systems LLC, a boutique software consulting firm specializing in
embedded systems software, today announced the availability of the
open–source KVM
hypervisor for MIPS® processors (KVM/MIPS).
Embedded system designers are becoming increasingly interested in
virtualization for a variety of reasons, including security,
fault-isolation, legacy software support (migrating to multi-core), and
flexibility in resource provisioning. A common application for embedded
virtualization today is in mobile phones, smart digital televisions and
set-top boxes, where trusted and secure applications (DRM) share the
platform with third party and untrusted applications.
KVM, the Kernel-based Virtual Machine, is a fast and secure open source
framework that brings full virtualization to Linux and has become the
favored virtualization solution of the Linux kernel community. It
enables multiple operating system instances to run securely on a single
processor. KVM consists of a loadable kernel module, and so is a natural
fit for Linux-based systems that need virtualization. "Because KVM is
integrated into the Linux kernel, it takes full advantage of the
operating environment," Red Hat explains in a blog
entry.
The KVM/MIPS hypervisor supports all MIPS32® processors and platforms,
including those that do not implement virtualization hardware support.
"While most embedded virtualization solutions use para-virtualization,
KVM/MIPS uses trap and emulate to securely execute guest code,"
said Sanjay Lal, Co-Founder, Kyma Systems. This approach has the
advantage of requiring minimal changes to the guest kernel. “We've
limited the changes to the Linux guest to less than 10 lines of code and
use advanced techniques like run-time binary translation to minimize the
number of traps and greatly improve performance."
“We are pleased to see support for MIPS in the popular KVM hypervisor.
This is yet another step in the continued growth of the broad ecosystem
around the MIPS architecture. We’re impressed with Kyma Systems’
technology, as its solution enables efficient virtualization on
unmodified MIPS CPUs with only minimal changes to the kernel,” said
Gideon Intrater, vice president of marketing, MIPS Technologies, Inc.
The KVM/MIPS hypervisor will be submitted to the open source community
in the fourth quarter of 2012.
About Kyma Systems
For more information on Kyma Systems and KVM/MIPS please visit http://kymasys.com.
MIPS and MIPS-Based are trademarks or registered trademark of MIPS
Technologies, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All
other trademarks referred to herein are the property of their respective
owners.
