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In a bare metal or native virtualization, the hypervisor runs without a host operating system. A hypervisor, also known as a virtual machine monitor or VMM, is a type of virtualization software that supports the creation and management of virtual machines (VMs) by separating a computer's software from its hardware. A bare metal hypervisor, also called a Type I or Native hypervisor, is virtualization software that runs on host machine hardware directly, without requiring an underlying operating system12. This means that the bare metal hypervisor is the host or the operating system (OS) of the hardware1.
A guest operating system is an operating system that runs inside a virtual machine, on top of the hypervisor. A bare metal hypervisor can run multiple guest operating systems simultaneously, each with its own applications and resources. A guest operating system is not required for a bare metal hypervisor to run, but it is necessary for running applications on the virtual machine13.
Applications are software programs that perform specific tasks or functions for users. Applications can run on either the host operating system or the guest operating system, depending on the type of virtualization. In a bare metal virtualization, applications can run on the guest operating system, but not on the host operating system, since there is no host operating system. However, applications are not essential for a bare metal hypervisor to run, as they are only used by the users of the virtual machines