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David Coyle, Gartner Researcher: The 7 Side Effects Of Lousy Virtualization

June 24, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

David Coyle, research VP at Gartner, detailed the seven side effects at the research firm’s Infrastructure, Operations and Management Summit, which drew nearly 900 attendees. While virtualization promises to solve issues such as underutilization, high hardware costs and poor system availability, the benefits come only when the technology is applied with proper care and consistently monitored for change, Coyle explained.

Here are the reasons Gartner says virtualization is no IT cure-all:

1. Magnified failures. In the physical world, a server hardware failure typically would mean one server failed and backup servers would step in to prevent downtime. In the virtual world, depending on the number of virtual machines residing on a physical box, a hardware failure could impact multiple virtual servers and the applications they host

2. Degraded performance. Companies looking to ensure top performance of critical applications often dedicate server, network and storage resources for those applications, segmenting them from other traffic to ensure they get the resources they need. With virtualization, sharing resources that can be automatically allocated on demand is the goal in a dynamic environment. At any given time, performance of an application could degrade, perhaps not to a failure, but slower than desired.

3. Obsolete skills. IT might not realize the skill sets it has in-house won’t apply to a large virtualized production environment until they have it live. The skills needed to manage virtual environments should span all levels of support, including service desk operators who may be fielding calls regarding their virtual PCs. Companies will feel a bit of a talent shortage when moving toward more virtualized systems, and Coyle recommends starting the training now.

4. Complex root cause analysis. Virtual machines move — that is the part of their appeal. But as Coyle pointed out, it is also a potential issue when managing problems. Server problems in the past could be limited to one box, but now the problem can move with the virtual machine and lull IT staff into a false sense of security.

5. No standardization. Tools and processes used to address the physical environment can’t be directly applied to the virtual world, so many IT shops will have to think about standardizing how they address issues in the virtual environment.

6. Virtual machine sprawl. The most documented side effect to date, virtual server sprawl results from the combination of ease of deployment and lack of life-cycle management of virtual machines. The issue could cause consolidation efforts to go awry when more virtual machines crop up than there are server administrators to manage them.

7. May be habit forming. Once IT organizations start to use virtualization, they can’t stop themselves, Coyle said. He offered tips to help curb the damage done from giving into a virtual addition.

[In large part thanks to NetworkWorld]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: David Coyle, gartner, Gartner Infrastructure Operations and Management Summit, Infrastructure Operations and Management Summit, research, side effects, virtualisation, virtualization

Cisco Talks Up Data Center 3.0 Initiative, Wants To “Demistify Virtualization”

June 24, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

Cisco Systems today announced updates to several of its key products to accelerate applications in Data Center 3.0, Cisco’s vision for a virtualized data center tied together by a unified network fabric.

Cisco

Today’s announcements at Cisco Live also featured new tools and training to help networking professionals master the complexity of virtualized data centers. In essence, the company is rolling out a host of software and services designed to expand what data center administrators can do with virtualization.

“Real-time collaborative applications, energy concerns and the need to achieve greater efficiency from assets are driving IT managers to transform their data centers through new technologies,” said John McCool, senior vice president and general manager, Cisco Data Center, Switching and Services Group, and co-chair of the Cisco EcoBoard . “By providing virtualization technologies across the data center, Cisco aims to help businesses achieve the agility and resiliency they need to compete on a global scale.”

Where’s the beef, you ask?

The announcements coming out of Cisco include the release of the company’s WAAS (Wide Area Application Services) software version 4.1, which offers virtualized application hosting services, application acceleration and video deliver for branch offices, and Cisco’s VFrame Data Center release 1.2 for infrastructure provisioning with Cisco’s ACE (Application Control Engine) and VMware’s ESX Server software.

In addition, Cisco is releasing version 3.1 of ACE for the ACE 4710 application switch, which offers up to 4 gigabits-per-second of throughput. The company also is announcing the Cisco Data Center 3.0 professional programs and services for support customers and partners with data center deployments. Included in the services offerings is Cisco’s new Data Center Efficiency Program, part of the company’s Data Center Assurance Program 4.0, a Web-based tool that enables users to analyze power use in the data center and identify power and cooling technologies most useful in their facilities.

WAAS 4.1, VFrame 1.2 and the ACE Appliance will be available in the third quarter.

[Source: The Register]

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: ACE 3.1, Cisco, Cisco ACE, Cisco ACE 3.1, Cisco Data Center 3.0, Cisco Live, Cisco Systems, Cisco VFrame Data Center 1.2, Cisco virtualization, Cisco WAAS, Cisco WAAS 4.1, Cisco Wide Area Application Services, Data Center 3.0, Data Center Assurance Program 4.0, Data Center Efficiency Program, John McCool, network virtualization, VFrame Data Center 1.2, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualized data center, WAAS, WAAS 4.1, Wide Area Application Services

Breaking: Veeam Software Acquires nworks

June 23, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Veeam Software, known for virtualization management tools and its FastSCP file management freeware for VMware environments, has acquired nworks, a maker of “enterprise management connectors” that link VMware virtual infrastructure tools and enterprise systems management tools from Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft.

Veeam

nworks

“Our customers have been asking to manage their physical and virtual infrastructures through a single console, and many of them have significant investments in HP OpenView and Microsoft System Center Operations Manager,” says Ratmir Timashev, Veeam president and CEO (also see our video interview with him at the latest VMworld Europe).

Veeam’s new lineup of product offerings will include backup, reporting and monitoring tools as well as Veeam Configurator, which manages VMware configurations from a Windows interface; nworks Smart Plug-In for VMware for HP Software Operations Manager, which incorporates VMware management into HP OpenView; and nworks Management Pack for VMware for Microsoft System Center Operations Manager, which incorporates VMware management into Microsoft SCOM.

Filed Under: Acquisitions, Featured Tagged With: enterprise management connectors, FastSCP, Hewlett Packard, HP, HP OPenView, microsoft, Microsoft SCOM, Microsoft System Center Operations Manager, nworks, nworks Management Pack for VMware for Microsoft System, Ratmir Timashev, SCOM, Smart Plug-In for VMware for HP Software Operations Man, Veeam, Veeam Configurator, Veeam nworks, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization management, vmware, VMware VI, VMware virtual infrastructure

Application Virtualization Comparison Chart

June 20, 2008 by Robin Wauters 3 Comments

Sven Huisman and his coworker Matthijs Haverink were unable to find a good comparative list of application virtualization solutions, so they mocked up a useful chart of their own. The chart includes:

  • Microsoft Softgrid 4.2 (now called Microsoft Application Virtualization of which the 4.5 RC was shipped yesterday or App-V for short)
  • VMware ThinApp
  • Installfree Bridge
  • Citrix Application streaming
  • Symantec Appstream
  • Xenocode Virtual Application Studio

You can download the chart here, courtesy of the technical consultants.

[Source: ICT-Freak]

Filed Under: Featured, Guest Posts Tagged With: App-V, application virtualization, Citrix Application streaming, comparison, comparison chart, Installfree Bridge, Matthijs Haverink, Microsoft Application Virtualization, Microsoft SoftGrid, Microsoft Softgrid 4.2, SoftGrid, Sven Huisman, Symantec Appstream, virtualisation, virtualization, VMware ThinApp, Xenocode Virtual Application Studio

Red Hat Unveils Virtualization Strategy At Boston Summit

June 19, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

Today at Red Hat Summit in Boston, two of Red Hat’s emerging technology engineers, Dan Barrange and Richard Jones, presented the new tool sets that their team has developed for work with Xen virtual machines (VMs). It includes command line utilities, which will become part of the oVirt tool set, a web-based virtual machine management console built using Ruby on Rails.

oVirt uses Red Hat’s open source libvirt management framework that provides hypervisor-agnostic management interfacing, allowing the same tools to manage multiple different hypervisors. Libvirt already supports six hypervisors : Xen, KVM, QEMU, OpenVZ, Linux Containers (LVX) and Solaris LDoms.

The company also announced that its own embedded, lightweight, stand-alone hypervisor and accompanying management console are available in beta right now. Red Hat’s new Linux hypervisor hosts both Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems. Rather than base the software on the open-source Xen hypervisor, Red Hat has chosen the KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) project, which is already used by the major Linux OSs as the default server virtualization package. Another key difference: while Xen works well with Linux, it’s an add-on. KVM, on the other hand, is an integral part of Linux.

Read more about Red Hat’s virtualization announcements here.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Hypervisor, kvm, linux, management console, oVirt, qumranet, red hat, Red Hat Bostom Summit, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat hypervisor, Red Hat Summit, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization management console, Xen

Neocleus Raises $11,4 M in Series B Funding

June 19, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Neocleus, a startup yet to release a product who recently unveiled its ‘endpoint virtualization’ strategy, seems to have been convincing enough in validating its approach to investors. The company has raised $11.4M in Series B funding (PDF) in a round led by Battery Ventures and Gemini Israel Funds, its original investors.

Neocleus applies virtualization to desktops and laptops delivering the flexibility, manageability and security needed to address different user scenarios within a dynamic, dispersed enterprise. The company’s solutions, which include a Xen-based open source Type 1 bare-metal hypervisor for endpoints, aim to enable critical IT tasks to operate in isolated, trusted virtual environments with complete access to the capabilities offered by the underlying endpoint hardware.

Neocleus was founded in 2006 by industry veterans Ariel Gorfung (CEO) and Etay Bogner (CTO) and launched last May with the announcement of the Desktop Hypervisor Framework, an endpoint hypervisor enhancement to the Xen server hypervisor that the company will be contributing to the open source community.

Most recently Neocleus announced Trusted Edge, the first in a suite of virtual software appliances that allows for secure access to corporate resources – for employees, customers and partners – regardless of the endpoint’s location or state of security.

Filed Under: Featured, Funding Tagged With: Ariel Gorfung, Battery Ventures, Desktop Hypervisor Framework, endpoint hypervisor, endpoint virtualization, Etay Bogner, financing, Funding, Gemini Israel Funds, Neocleus, open source, Series B funding, Trusted Edge, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen

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