Esxlike
Esxlike is a term used to describe software systems that aim to emulate the architecture and operational model of VMware ESX/ESXi hypervisors. It denotes a class of lightweight, vendor-agnostic virtualization stacks that strive to deliver enterprise-grade features with a minimal host operating system footprint. Esxlike is not an official product but a descriptor used in academic, open-source, and industry discussions to discuss virtualization architectures that resemble ESX-style deployments.
The term originated in debates about virtualization design and open-source hypervisors, particularly to contrast bare-metal hypervisors
Typical features associated with Esxlike designs include VM provisioning and live migration, snapshots or checkpoints, virtual
There is no single standard, and Esxlike implementations vary widely in scope and maturity. Academic prototypes
Criticism often centers on fragmentation, limited driver support, and the lack of a canonical specification. Prospects