A recent survey of 1,948 users found Windows edging out Unix as the
top operating system that Linux replaces in migration projects.
Linux's presence in the data center has grown rapidly alongside
Windows' - together the two have been the fastest growing data
center operating systems, frequently at the expense of Unix. Now a
new survey by the Linux Foundation suggests that, at least among
large Linux users, Linux is growing at the expense of Windows,
too.
It is hard to get a precise picture of Linux's position in the
data center. No one company owns it, and various versions are
readily available through free download, which no one claims to
track. The Linux Foundation turned to known Linux users, the
members of its End User Council, and 1,900 other enterprise and
government Linux users selected by the Yoeman Technology Group.
When Linux growth has been tracked over the past decade, much of
it was attributed to migrations from the former Sun Microsystems'
Solaris, IBM AIX, and HP-UX and other Unixes. In the recent survey,
"migrations to Linux from Windows are surpassing those from Unix,"
the report said, with 37 percent coming from Windows and 31 percent
from the Unixes.
It says that 76 percent of companies plan to add more Linux
servers over the next 12 months, compared to 41 percent that plan
to add Windows servers. Over a five-year period, the shift
accelerates: 79.4 percent plan to add more Linux; 21 perent more
Windows. Forty-four percent said they were planning to maintain
their existing number of Windows servers, or decrease them over the
next 12 months.
The survey contains the bias of being submitted to existing
Linux users motivated to fill out a survey from the Linux
Foundation. Nevertheless, previous foundation reports and anecdotal
evidence had revealed preferences for Linux and Windows, not a
favoring of Linux over Windows, its spokesmen said.
In addition, 66 percent say their current Linux deployments are
new server deployments rather than replacements for existing
systems, showing Linux is at the forefront of new application
implementations. "This greenfield market-share grab is a good
indicator of a platform's future performance," claimed the Yeoman
Technology Group report.