BitVisor is a tiny hypervisor initially designed for mediating I/O access from a single guest OS. Its implementation is mature enough to run Windows and Linux, and can be used as a generic platform for various research and development projects.
Reductively Architected Breviloquently Built Information Environment
An ambitious project designed to workaround many of the limitations of conventional web and database services.
Fast lightweight database-web server primarily targeting virtual environments.
Run up to ten or twenty times more independent virtual guests per hypervisor than Linux or Windows
Secure, isolated, non-extensible API is opaque to hackers.
Hypervisor R&D for recent x86 with support for DRTM + 2D paging
*****
XMHF is no longer in active development. It is superseded by uberXMHF (uber eXtensible Micro-Hypervisor Framework) which is available at: http://uberxmhf.org
*****
XMHF is an eXtensible and Modular Hypervisor Framework that strives to be a comprehensible and flexible platform for performing hypervisor research and development. The framework allows others to build custom (security-sensitive) hypervisor-based solutions (called "hypapps").
...
A hardware supported hypervisor originally built for malware analysis. Features: Linux VM introspection, minimal detectability, small (~150KB), simple, and well documented. Can be used for other purposes. Support for Intel-VT & Windows coming soon.
Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.
MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
VMI-Linux is a virtualization interface for Linux with the goal of introducing cross hypervisor compatibility, so a single Linux kernel can run unmodified on L4, VMware, Xen and other hypervisors, as well as native hardware, with excellent performance.