You don't have to use proprietary virtualization software to run virtual machines. The open source community boasts...

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offerings for all different virtualization needs, so you can assemble a program that has exactly the features you want without high upfront costs or tricky service-level agreements.

Open source virtualization software can help you avoid the costs that come with proprietary software from vendors such as VMware. It also enables you to get updates more frequently, and you can change the source code when necessary.

But one caveat of open source virtualization is the potential lack of support. These programs might not include the level of support you get with a proprietary offering, but there are still plenty of forums and mailing lists to find help or documentation.

You can start with VirtualBox, Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) or Quick Emulator (QEMU). These programs provide a standard set of virtualization functions for your data center, and they enable you to customize your virtual environment as needed.

VirtualBox VirtualBox is a popular open source virtualization option. It is compatible with Windows, Linux, Mac and even Solaris hosts, and it runs on off-the-shelf hardware. VirtualBox can run any number of guest virtual machines (VM) from the following operating systems: Windows NT, Windows Server 2003, Linux 2.4 to 4.x, Solaris, OpenSolaris, DOS/Windows, OS/2, and OpenBSD. It can also run macOS as a guest. Figure A: VirtualBox running Windows 10 and Ubuntu Desktop 18.10 guests VirtualBox is under constant development, but it has a lot of features for VM management. One of the main benefits of VirtualBox is the Snapshots function. With Snapshots, you can easily roll back a VM to a previous state. This is useful for VM testing and configuration, which can include a lot of trial and error. You can also create clones with VirtualBox to configure a base VM of a clean host and clone it as needed; this is beneficial for troubleshooting issues. With virtual network support, you can run VMs on your own subnet for testing purposes or even create a subnet only your local area network can reach. VirtualBox's latest version has a File Manager functionality. The tool's dialog-based windows make it easy to transfer files to and from guests and hosts with a few clicks. If you want a better connection between guests and hosts, VirtualBox offers Guest Additions device drivers that boost performance and usability on a guest-by-guest basis.

KVM KVM is another open source virtualization offering that runs Linux on x86 hardware with Intel Virtualization Technology or AMD Virtualization extensions. The program lets you run multiple VMs with either Windows or Linux images. The KVM feature list is quite lengthy, and it includes standard functions for live migration, scheduling, job prioritization and resource control. But there are features that make KVM stand out. One capability is nested guest creation for testing or development use cases, or if you need multiple hypervisors. KVM also supports kernel samepage merging, which enables you to share identical memory pages among different processes or virtualized guests. If you need device management, KVM makes it easy to assign specific devices -- such as a network card -- to specific guests. This is useful for hosts that contain numerous devices, but you don't want every device to be available to every guest. Figure B: Choosing a storage volume for a guest OS Note that if you use KVM, new guest setup isn't quite as user-friendly as it is in VirtualBox. To create a guest, you must create storage volumes and pools. KVM has all the necessary drivers included in the official kernel tree, so you don't have to install them via Guest Additions.