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Robin Wauters

Trend Micro Enters Growing Market Of VMware Virtualization Security Providers

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Trend Micro, a global leader in Internet content security, has announced a number of innovations in security solutions for VMware virtualized environments which it will debut at the 2008 RSA Conference in San Francisco.

Trend Micro logo

The prototype technology consists of a virtualization security solution that operates in a VMware ESX 3.5 environment, scans for infected machines and remediates any that are found. With this technology, Trend Micro intends to provide greater protection for VMware virtual machines.

Trend Micro is also announcing that its enterprise security products for the endpoint, gateway and server are supported in VMware environments. This enables joint customers to gain the same level of support for Trend Micro products running in VMware virtualized environments as they would on physical hardware.

From the press release:

Trend Micro is integrating the recently announced VMware VMsafeTM APIs into its security technology in an effort to enable channel partners and customers to enhance the security of their VMware environments. VMsafe technology protects applications running on virtual machines in ways previously not possible in physical environments. The VMsafe APIs allow vendors to develop advanced security products that combat the latest generation of malware. VMsafe technology integrates into the VMware hypervisor and provides the transparency to prevent threats and attacks such as viruses, Trojans and keyloggers from ever reaching a virtual machine. The Trend Micro brand of security software will have the ability to run isolated from, and at a higher level of privilege than, the target malware. This will allow offline VMware virtual machines to be scanned and remediated prior to being reactivated.

“While organizations frequently use virtualization to help save energy costs and lower administrative IT expenses, they also have an opportunity to leverage this technology for improved security,” said Punit Minocha, vice president of business development for Trend Micro. “Most security solutions in the market underperform in virtual environments so, together with VMware, we want to help our customers to take advantage of the cost benefits of virtualization and to improve their organization’s security profile at the same time.”

VMware-support for existing Trend Micro products is effective immediately. For a complete list of these products, please visit www.trendmicro.com/go/virtualization. Current VMware-supported products use the existing licensing model. Trend Micro customers who purchase these versions and switch their deployments to VMware can do so at no extra cost or software. This provides customers a choice of running the applications on standalone hardware or on virtual environments, depending on their IT needs. Certain exceptions may apply.

The new Trend Micro technology securing virtualized environments is expected to be available in the second half of 2008.

[Source: SYS-CON]

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: Punit Minocha, Trend Micro, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization security, virtualized security, VMSafe, VMSafe API, vmware, VMware ESX 3.5

VMware Contest: Make A ‘Switch To Fusion’ Video and Win A MacBook Air

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

We’re not sure what to think of VMware Team Fusion’ latest contest. If you upload a one-minute video about your experience in switching to VMware Fusion in order to run Windows on your Mac, or you write a blog post about it, you can win a set of prizes ranging from t-shirts, bumper stickers and an iPod Touch to a MacBook Air.

MacBook Air

On itself, it’s just a nice, harmless marketing campaign to increase awareness about VMware Fusion on video sharing sites and gain extra backlinks for obvious reasons (might have something to do with the increasing pressure from competitors on VMware, aptly written out on bMighty). But we’d be surprised if tons of users go out of their way to create free marketing material for the company, even if the prizes (at least, the Apple products) are bound to spark interest here and there. It just seems it a bit too opportunistic, and they’re putting in an extra threshold by asking contestants to go through a bunch of instructions in a PDF file.

How about you, would you enter a contest to help VMware in getting more awareness for its desktop virtualization solutions?

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Apple, contest, MacBook Air, marketing, UGC, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VMWare Fusion, VMware Fusion Video Contest

Another Study Predicts Huge and Rapid Virtualization Market Growth

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Application Delivery Networking provider F5 Networks today released the results of another survey that shows the storage virtualization market is set to grow rapidly. The online study reveals the percentage of U.S. enterprises that use storage virtualization solutions will more than double from 21 % to 47 % in the next few years.

F5 Networks

The survey of 324 medium- and large-enterprise IT organizations in the U.S. and Europe was conducted in February and found that a primary driver for enterprise interest in storage virtualization is reduction in operating expense and capital investment. Underscoring their interest in reducing costs, respondents indicated that 20 % of IT labor is spent on storage-related activities such as provisioning, backup, and moving data.

“We continue to see enterprise storage requirements grow at a remarkable rate, particularly for file-based, unstructured data,” said Steve Bishop, CTO at VeriStor Systems. “As a solutions provider specializing in advanced data storage and virtualization architectures, VeriStor is constantly seeking ways to help our customers reduce storage costs, improve resource utilization, and simplify storage administration. Technologies such as F5’s Intelligent File Virtualization are key to enabling those types of solutions.”

Other findings from the survey included:

  • Respondents stressed the need for storage virtualization solutions to work with a heterogeneous storage infrastructure. Sixty-three percent of U.S. companies rated this as important or very important.
  • Respondents showed a strong interest in solutions that address file-based storage — with 80 percent of respondents who are planning to deploy storage virtualization confirming this as part of their plan.
  • Existing storage virtualization users reported high success rates. Eighty-six percent of all U.S. companies reported achieving at least one or more of their original goals.

For additional survey information and results, please download the PDF from the following location: www.f5.com/pdf/news/20080404-state-of-storage-virtualization.pdf.

[Source: press release]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: F5, F5 Networks, growth, report, research, study, survey, virtualisation, virtualization

Montego Networks Debuts HyperVSecurity Alliance

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Montego Networks, which officially launched two weeks ago, has made an announcement at the RSA Conference 2008 about its HyperVSecurity Alliance, an initiative allowing third-party vendors to integrate their products with Montego’s HyperVSecurity technology platform.

Montego Networks logo

The Montego HyperVSecurity vendor-agnostic framework facilitates an interoperable virtual security architecture enabling VM-to-VM visibility, inspection and security, and delivers valuable solutions with minimal network configuration, reliability and performance headaches. For virtualization customers, the HyperVSecurity Alliance provides a flexible, integrated toolkit they can confidently deploy to address needs for virtual security, application performance and investment protection. Through its Alliance, Montego Networks is well positioned to build productive partnerships with vendors of best-of-breed IDS/IPS, patch management, behavioral analysis, anti-malware, network monitoring, and other applications.

The HyperVSecurity Alliance lets its partners rapidly leverage advantages of the Montego platform including fast access to virtual market applications, co-branded lead-generation channel presence & sales. Concurrently, it gives virtualization channel partners a ready-made portfolio of certified products, customer-ready solutions and cross-sell revenue opportunities.

The Charter Members of the HyperVSecurity Alliance include these networking and security solutions providers:

  • Cyberoam: Unified Threat Management Plus (UTM+)
  • Lancope: StealthWatch™ for NetFlow and sFlow-based Anomaly Detection and Network Performance Monitoring
  • Plixer International: Scrutinizer™ NetFlow Analyzer
  • StillSecure: Commercial and open source secure network infrastructure solutions including NAC, IDS/IPS, vulnerability management and a unified networking/security platform

The Montego HyperSwitch approaches virtualized network security from a new direction that integrates network policy enforcement and access control with a high-availability virtual security switch. This unique approach allows the Montego HyperSwitch to efficiently deliver advanced capabilities including policy-based virtual network partitioning, L2-L4 Firewall, Identity Firewall, Content Firewall, Virtual Network Discovery, Secure Inter-VM communication, 802.1Q VLANs, 802.1D Spanning Tree, Load-balanced Quality of Service (QoS), Policy-Based Switching, Policy-Based Traffic Mirroring, NetFlow, and more. The HyperSwitch also includes Montego Firewall Control Protocol (MFCP) which enables 3rd party security vendors to leverage API calls that allow for remote configuration of its security policies.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: HyperVSecurity, HyperVSecurity Alliance, Montego, Montego HyperSwitch, Montego HyperVSecurity, Montego Networks, RSA Conference, RSA Conference 2008, virtualisation, virtualization

The Gap Between Hardware and Software

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

Interesting read over at EE Times Asia, titled “IC industry addresses multicore, programming software gap“.

An excerpt:

“The semiconductor industry is starting to address what’s being called a software gap between a rising tide of multicore processors and a lack of parallel programming tools and techniques to make use of them.

The gap came into stark focus in the embedded world at the Multicore Expo, where chipmakers Freescale Semiconductor, Intel Corp., MIPS and a handful of silicon startups sketched out directions for their multicore products. Others warned that the industry has its work cut out for it delivering the software that will harness the next-generation chips.”

“There is a major gap between the hardware and the software,” said Eric Heikkila, director of embedded hardware research at Venture Development Corp. (VDC).

About 55 % of embedded system developers surveyed by VDC said they are using or will use multicore processors in the next 12 months. That fact is fueling the company’s projections that the market for embedded multicore processors will grow from about $372 million in 2007 to $2.47 billion in 2011.

In the PC market, the figures are even more dramatic. About 40 % of all processors Intel shipped in 2007 used multiple cores, but that will rise to 95 % in 2011, said Doug Davis, general manager of Intel’s embedded group.

But on the software side, vendors reported that only about 6 % of their tools were ready for parallel chips in 2007, a figure that will only rise to 40 % in 2011, VDC said. As much as 85 % of all embedded programming is now done in C or C++, languages that are “difficult to optimize for multicore,” said Heikkila.

Standardization

The Multicore Association announced at the Multicore Expo it has completed work on an applications programming interface for communications between cores, and is now working to define a standard for embedded virtualization.

“The ultimate goal of every computer scientist is to create a new language, but my personal view is we should not do it this time around,” said Wen-mei Hwu, a veteran researcher in parallel programming and professor of engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, referring to a flowering of languages developed for big parallel computers two decades ago, many of which never gained traction. I believe there will be new language constructs in C/C++ to support some of the new frameworks people will develop, but even these constructs, if we are not careful, will not be widely adopted,” Hwu said. “Ultimately, I think we will make a small amount of extensions to C, but I think it’s too early.”

On-chip fabric

For their part, Freescale and Intel sketched out design trends they see on the horizon for their multicore chips.

“Freescale is now sampling the first dual-core versions of its PowerQuicc processors, aimed at telecom OEMs. The chips are part of a family that will eventually scale to 32-core devices”, said Dan Cronin, VP of R&D for Freescale’s networking division.

The processors will use a new on-chip interconnect fabric. They will also embed in hardware a hypervisor, a kind of low-level scheduling unit, co-developed with IBM according to specs set in the Power.org group. “Freescale will release an open source reference design for companies that want to build virtualization software that taps into the hypervisor”, Cronin said.

[Source: VMBlog]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: embedded hypervisors, Freescale, gap, hardware, intel, Mips, Multicore Expo, software, virtualisation, virtualization

KVM-65 Released, Supports S390 Architecture

April 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

KVM-65 was released today. The most interesting feature in this release is support for the S/390 architecture, more specifically, the System z9 line of mainframes. On x86, the most interesting change is the separation of timer and I/O completion handling into a separate thread (these used to be serviced by the same thread that executed vcpu 0). The change should result in improved responsiveness and better smp performance.

As Anthony Liguori puts it:

“The s390 is the grand-daddy of virtualization. Everything started there. In so many ways, everything we’re doing with x86 virtualization is just playing catch-up. The new exciting features like hardware virtualization support and hardware paging support have been in s390 forever.”

“s390 clearly has a very mature hypervisor. What many people may not know though is that it’s normal to run two hypervisors at any given time on s390. At the bottom level, there’s PR/SM which divides the machine into rather coarse partitions. Within a PR/SM partition, you can run z/OS or Linux. You can also run z/VM within a PR/SM partition. z/VM is another hypervisor that allows for much more sophisticated features like memory overcommit and processor overcommit. The user has the ability to decide how much hypervisor they need to maximize the efficiency of their workloads.”

These are the changes from KVM-64:

  • fix hotplug build for non-x86
  • ignore reads from the apic EOI register
  • fixes Linux 2.6.25-rclate bootup problems
  • compile fixes
  • fix ftruncate() on hugetlbfs use on older Linux hosts
  • endianness fix virtio-block
  • fixes virtio-blk on ppc
  • refactor in-kernel PIT to be a separate device
  • separate thread for I/O completions and timers
  • fix vmmouse smp
  • fix loading uninitialized variable into apic registers
  • fixes apic being disabled on smp Linux guests running X
  • disable kvm clock on Voyager or SGI Visual WS
  • s390 support
  • fix large pages
  • speedup msr processing on Intel via msr bitmap
  • add slab shrinker support
  • reduces nonswappable footprint under memory pressure
  • code cleanup
  • vm refcounting
  • only mark a page as accessed if it was really accessed by the guest
  • drop slots_lock while in guest mode
  • fixes long latencies with iothread
  • prepopulate guest pages only after write-protecting them
  • fixes smp race leading to guest spinning

[Source: Tales of a Code Monkey]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: I/O, kvm, KVM-64, KVM-65, mainframe, S390, System Z9, virtualisation, virtualization, X86

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