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This book focuses on the core question of the necessary
architectural support provided by hardware to efficiently run
virtual machines, and of the corresponding design of the
hypervisors that run them. Virtualization is still possible when
the instruction set architecture lacks such support, but the
hypervisor remains more complex and must rely on additional
techniques. Despite the focus on architectural support in current
architectures, some historical perspective is necessary to
appropriately frame the problem. The first half of the book
provides the historical perspective of the theoretical framework
developed four decades ago by Popek and Goldberg. It also describes
earlier systems that enabled virtualization despite the lack of
architectural support in hardware. As is often the case, theory
defines a necessary-but not sufficient-set of features, and modern
architectures are the result of the combination of the theoretical
framework with insights derived from practical systems. The second
half of the book describes state-of-the-art support for
virtualization in both x86-64 and ARM processors. This book
includes an in-depth description of the CPU, memory, and I/O
virtualization of these two processor architectures, as well as
case studies on the Linux/KVM, VMware, and Xen hypervisors. It
concludes with a performance comparison of virtualization on
current-generation x86- and ARM-based systems across multiple
hypervisors.
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