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SteelEye Ships Protection Suite for Citrix XenServer

July 21, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

SteelEye Technology, a California-based provider of business continuity solutions that focus on data protection, data replication and disaster recovery, has started shipping its Protection Suite for Citrix XenServer in addition to an existing product for VMware Infrastructure.

SteelEye Protection Suite delivers real-time LAN and WAN replication of XenServer virtual machines. It integrates with XenMotion and XenCenter to fully support manual movement of replicated VMs within a server pool. SteelEye Protection Suite is a host-based, storage repository replication solution that provides continuous data protection (CDP), change-only replication, integrated compression and a highly optimized replication engine.

SteelEye Protection Suite for XenServer is available immediately through SteelEye’s global network of value-added resellers and OEM partners. Customers that want to use the Protection Suite for a single migration of virtual machines can purchase a time-limited license for either 15 days ($495) or 90 days ($1,495).

Customers that wish to use SteelEye for continuous replication of their VMs, can make use of a permanent license that supports an unlimited number of VMs per XenServer host. SteelEye pricing is set at $2,495 for XenServer Standard Edition and at $3,995 for XenServer Enterprise or Platinum Edition.

SteelEye also announced it has joined the Citrix Ready Program, an initiative designed for organizations that have demonstrated product and solution compatibility with one or more Citrix products.

[Source: Marketwire]

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: citrix, Citrix Ready Program, citrix xenserver, Protection Suite, SteelEye, SteelEye Protection Suite, SteelEye Protection Suite for Citrix XenServer, SteelEye Protection Suite for XenServer, SteelEye Technology, virtual machine replication, virtualisation, virtualization, vm replication, xenserver

TOLIS Group Teams Up With Parallels, Its Backup Solution Gets Certification

July 18, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

TOLIS Group yesterday announced a partnership with Parallels, as its BRU Server network backup solution has been successfully tested for compatibility with Parallels Server for Mac virtualization software. BRU Server is now listed in the Parallels Certified Products Catalog.

“In virtualized system environments, BRU Server’s advanced architecture simply treats the host and guest systems as networked client systems,” said Tim Jones, president and CTO of TOLIS Group. “Both file by file and disaster recovery compatible image backup and restore of guest systems are supported using normal BRU Server operations – no special treatment is needed. BRU Server and Parallels work together seamlessly.”

BRU Server’s agents provide full backup support for all guest systems including: x86 Windows, Solaris, Open and FreeBSD, Linux, and Mac OS X. Additionally, TOLIS’ OFM module allows the proper management of open file environments such as Exchange, FileMaker and Active Directory running on Windows virtualized machines.

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: Apple, backup, BRU, BRU server, FreeBSD, linux, Mac, Mac OS X, network backup, Parallels, Parallels Server for Mac, partnership, Server for Mac, Tim Jones, TOLIS, TOLIS BRU, TOLIS Group, TOLIS Group BRU, virtualisation, virtualization

VMware Offers US Employees A Chance To Swap Their Post-IPO Stock Options

July 18, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Tech Trader Daily found out that VMware today disclosed in an SEC filing that it plans to offer employees a chance to swap their post-IPO, “underwater” stock options for an equal number of options with an exercise price equal to the share price on the day immediately following the data the exchange is finished. Got that?

ZDnet clarifies:

Non-U.S. employees will be granted  a “to-be-determined proportionate number of restricted stock units after the exchange offer for U.S. employees is completed,” president and CEO Paul Maritz wrote in an e-mail to employees.

…

U.S. employees will get the same number of options – but at a price based on the close of the stock the day after the exchange is completed. In addition, the clock on the options vesting schedule will start over. The exchange is voluntary and company executives are not eligible.

John DiFucci, software analyst with J.P. Morgan apparently said this: “[This is more of] an effort to abate a brain drain from the company… While we consider this a modest positive for the stock, we also note that it acts to slightly dilute current shareholders.”

VMW, which rose $1.94 in the regular session, is off 28 cents, or 0.7%, to $38.61, in after hours trading.

VMware

Filed Under: News Tagged With: IPO, Paul Maritz, post-IPO, SEC, SEC filing, stock, stock options, underwater stock options, virtualisation, virtualization, VMW, vmware

Rich Wolski on Eucalyptus: Open Source Cloud Computing (Video Interview – 2/2)

July 18, 2008 by Toon Vanagt Leave a Comment

In this second part of our video interview with Rich Wolski (see the first part here), recorded at the O’Reilly Velocity conference, we learn how Eucalyptus came around the Amazon subscription method, where credit cards are the key to authentication. Offering ‘free and open’ clouds in university environments was achieved by introducing a system administrator in between the user account request and the issuing of certificates. Upon user request, the Eucalyptus user subscription interface generates an e-mail to an administrator, who will then perform a ‘manual’ verification. This can be a phone call or a physical meeting.


Eucalyptus Director Rich Wolski on open source cloud computing, Xen and Amazon’s EC2 (part 2/2) from Toon Vanagt on Vimeo.

Users did not like Rocks (leading open source cloud management tool), but the community (in smaller community/ deployment supports) preferred to do this manually. So Eucalyptus 1.1 provides Guidance, a script to build from scratch by hand.

A ‘build with one button’ remains the goal for future versions.

The full Eucalyptus image is only 55 Mb (without Linux image) and includes the necessary packages in order to make sure all of the revision-levels are fully compatible. Eucalyptus comes as Free BSD Open-Source license with a small disclaimer that the University of Santa Barbara explicitly wants to avoid any intellectual property infringements and will take necessary steps if needed.

Virtualization is supported by Xen 3.1 for security sake (3.0 works too, but is discouraged).

Lessons learned in building clouds from open source are quite rare. Here are a few from Rich:

Unlike commercial environments (where one controls the configuration, hardware purchase and networking), the architectural decisions are very different in open source environment, where one does not know the installation. One of the current challenges is to build a system depending on the control you have over your specific installation, you could successfully remove more of the portability from the system as you needs fit.

A second lesson is that people do things by hand and this is an opportunity for automation. Nobody is deploying Linux manually, instead sys admin use distributions. Shouldn’t there be a similar cloud distribution product out there? The people at Puppet were eager to help on providing such scripts for cloud deployments. According to Rich, this illustrates how O’Reilly should be credited for creating a good atmosphere at the Velocity 08 conference where a lot of cross-fertilization happened.

Rich ends the interview by throwing a fundamental question at the cloud community. He classifies current cloud initiatives on a scale based on the ‘closeness’ of the application layer to the cloud API. At the one end of this spectrum, he puts Google Apps (with Python oriented function calls) and at the other end Amazon EC2 (a set of very simple web service interfaces to the underlying virtualization technology) and all other cloud offerings float in between. This impacts what you can do with virtualization. Google AppEngine becomes your compiler on their end of the scale.

Rich wonders if this tighter link to the Google AppEngine will become a liability or an asset in the future when it comes to virtualization capabilities?

We invite you to provide your answers in the comments below!

Filed Under: Interviews, People, Videos Tagged With: Amazon EC2, cloud computing, ec2, eucalyptus, interview, kvm, LibVert, O'Reilly, O'Reilly Velocity, open source, open source cloud computing, Rich Wolski, VDE, video, video interview, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, Xen, Xen virtualization

Vizioncore Updates vRanger and vCharter Pro

July 17, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

Vizioncore has released an upgrade to its backup and restore solution for virtualization environments, vRanger Pro 3.2.4. With vRanger Pro, administrators can schedule regular image-level backups of virtual or physical machines – while the machine is still running.  Images can be stored either locally in the SAN or sent as compressed files over a WAN to remote locations to support disaster recovery strategies. vRanger Pro also enables restore of individual files efficiently with an explorer tree through which users can easily identify and “grab” needed files.

vRanger Pro 3.2.4 is a minor update to the core 3.2 functionality.  There are two key components of this release: VCB Differential Backups and Support for FIPS encryption. Also included in this release are several bug fixes.

In addition, Vizioncore has released a minor dot release to its enterprise-level virtualization monitoring solution, vCharter Pro 3.0.1.  Key improvements include support for external Oracle databases (versions 9i or 10g) and a significant number of bug fixes. The 3.0.1 version of vCharter Pro now also supports installation on the 64-bit version of Windows Server 2003.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: backup, release, restore, update, upgrade, vCharter, vCharter Pro, vCharter Pro 3.0.1, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization monitoring, Vizioncore, Vizioncore vCharter, Vizioncore vCharter Pro, Vizioncore vCharter Pro 3.0.1, Vizioncore vRanger, Vizioncore vRanger Pro, Vizioncore vRanger Pro 3.2.4, vRanger, vRanger Pro, vRanger Pro 3.2.4

ScaleMP Takes vSMP Foundation to Dell PowerEdge Servers

July 17, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

ScaleMP today announced the availability of its vSMP Foundation Standalone software on the Dell PowerEdge server platforms. The vSMP Foundation Standalone software aggregates multiple x86 and cluster-based systems into a single virtual shared memory system, reducing overall system management complexity while providing “maximum processing and memory capabilities”.

The Dell PowerEdge blade servers running the vSMP Foundation Standalone software allows customers to create single, virtual Symmetrical Multiprocessor (SMP) systems with up to 32 sockets (128 cores) and up to 1 TB of shared memory. According to the company, High Performance Computing (HPC) users can achieve additional cost effectiveness with entry-level solutions using two Dell PowerEdge 1950 III servers and vSMP Foundation Standalone software, in order to create a high-performance virtual four-socket system.

ScaleMP


ScaleMP’s vSMP Foundation Standalone aggregation platform provides its customers with:

  • Up to 1 TB of shared memory for large memory requirements
  • Up to 128 cores virtual SMP, with high memory bandwidth
  • Ease of use and lowest Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for applications, with simplified cluster and I/O architecture management
  • Improved utilization through a centralized and consolidated architecture

Filed Under: News, Partnerships Tagged With: data aggregation, data aggregation software, Dell, Dell PowerEdge, PowerEdge, ScaleMP, ScaleMP Dell, ScaleMP vSMP Foundation, ScaleMP vSMP Foundation Standalone, virtualisation, virtualization, vSMP Foundation, vSMP Foundation Standalone

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