VMware’s new management tools are hybrid heavy
VMware has been on a news blitz announcing updates to many of its management products and one specific focus has been on enabling hybrid cloud computing.
The company has a stronghold in its compute virtualisation software based on vSphere, but as more enterprises use public cloud services, VMware is extending the support of its management tools to include off-premises resources. VMware hopes that any customer looking to use Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure or Google Cloud Platform will choose the company’s vRealize Suite to centrally manage their on-premises virtualised environments and the public cloud.
VRealize Suite combines management software products, such as the newly updated vRealize Operations 6.2, which is meant to be a portal for monitoring and managing a virtual environment. It gives users a central view into all of the virtualised resources in an environment, allowing issues to be resolved and compliance monitoring to be done from a single interface.
The rest of vRealize Suite is made up of Log Insight (also updated to a 3.3 release with backend enhancements), vRealize Automation (for automatically provisioning workloads across virtual and cloud-based infrastructure) and vRealize Business Cloud (which provides chargeback of usage to departments).
One new hybrid cloud enablement feature is Portable Licensing Unit, which prices VMware’s management tools based on how many workloads they manage no matter where those workloads live. They could be VMware virtualised resources, or those in the public cloud.
Carl Brooks, an analyst at 451 Research, notes that the product updates fit with VMware’s announced strategy of bundling management tools atop its core virtualisation products. “They want to be the gateway, they want to be the control panel in front of the admin, and therefore the most sticky software in the data centre,” he notes.
But these tools are no silver bullet, Brooks says. They can do high-level API integration with public clouds like AWS and Azure. But management of extensive use of those platforms will likely require expertise in any particular vendor’s cloud.
Hybrid cloud management technology is not unique to VMware: A whole host of vendors offer this capability. VMware’s one differentiator is its network virtualisation NSX technology, Brooks says. VMware has hinted that it will enable customers to use NSX as a bridge between their on-premises and public clouds. Already customers can run the software in both locations.
In addition to the operations management news, VMware announced Virtual SAN 6.2, the fourth-generation update to the company’s all-flash storage platform for virtual machines. It includes new deduplication and compression capabilities, which along with other new features, can increase storage efficiency by up to 10x, VMware says.
VMware also said its HyperConverged infrastructure (HCI) business, named EVO, is growing and now has 3,000 customers.
And on Tuesday VMware had a series of announcements related to its End User Computing division.
Meanwhile, VMware is doing some restructuring internally, having recently announced layoffs as its parent company EMC (which owns a super-majority stake in VMware) moves forward with plans to be bought by Dell.
IDG News Service
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