Release: VMware Fusion 2.0

On September 12 VMware released the second version of its desktop virtualization product for Mac OS: Fusion 2.0 (build 116369).

This new release is significant in terms of features as it offers:

  • automatic synchronization of Windows guest folders to the Mac OS host ones
  • automatic mapping of the Mac OS printers in the guest OS
  • virtual machine library
  • support for multiple snapshots (manual or scheduled through the new AutoProtect)
  • support for multiple displays
  • integrated VMware Importer (V2V migration for Parallels Desktop and Microsoft Virtual PC for Mac OS VMs)
  • experimental support for 4-way virtual CPUs
  • experimental Unity support for Linux guest OS
  • experimental support for Mac OS X Server as guest OSb
  • bundle with McAfee VirusScan Plus (12-months free subscription)

To further increase its market share against Parallels, VMware is offering the new product for free to all customers that already purchased Fusion 1.x.

Download a trial here.

The virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

VMworld 2008 wrap-up – Part 3

In the previous parts of this wrap-up we summarized the brand new message that VMware delivered on stage (Part 1), trying to analyze its impact on the market, and the major technology trends emerging from the activity of its partners (Part 2).

In this last part we’ll take a look at how the competitors tried to position against VMware during its own event:

  • Citrix developed some impressive guerrilla marketing capabilities, anticipating for the second time the VMware moves right before their event.
    This time the company announced the availability of XenServer 5.0, which includes a number of features like the new high-availability module for Enterprise and Platinum editions developed by Marathon Technologies, the open storage APIs supporting DAS, NAS and SAN (both FC and iSCSI), the virtual machine tagging capability and more.
    XenServer 5 comes with a new Cloud edition (featuring a new consumption based pricing model) that it’s included in a new product bundle called Citrix Cloud Center, along with NetScaler, WANScaler and the upcoming Workflow Studio orchestration framework.
  • VMLogix continues to position itself as a VMware competitor in the virtual lab automation segment, announcing a new product that once again has the same name of the VMware’s one: StageManager.
    Of course the difference with VMware Stage Manager is that this solution will support Citrix and Microsoft hypervisors as soon as it will be out in December.
  • Trigence attempts a (weak) attack on the application virtualization front, announcing the availability of its Trigence AE 3.2 for Windows platform.
  • Kace, a system management company, has the same ambition and announces the acquisition of an application virtualization player: Computers In Motion.
  • Thinsy, the company that was brave enough to launch the nth commercial implementation of Xen in November 2007, still thinks it has a chance to gain some market share in the hardware virtualization segment and announces the second generation of its hypervisor.

This list may be incomplete but it’s evident that besides Citrix and Microsoft (that made its move the week before VMworld), there few companies that can afford the risk to go against VMware.
We’ll see if next year, when VMware vCenter will be everywhere, this list will become longer or not.

VMworld 2008 wrap-up – Part 2

In the first part of this wrap-up virtualization.info covered the announcements made by VMware during the opening keynotes and after them. But that is just a small part of the VMworld story.

This year on the exhibit floor there were 206 partners and competitors, representing the whole virtualization industry, and they had a lot to say as well.
In this second part we’ll try to summarize and analyze what kind of message the partners delivered while VMware was flying high in skies full of clouds.

The partners go for every opportunity, harsh competition and low profits.

Despite the undeniable interest in virtualization (VMworld counted +14,000 delegates this year) the big analysis firms are pretty confident that this is just the beginning, as only 7% of the market is currently adopting virtualization technologies.

This VMworld clarified that this statement is true not just for potential customers. It’s true for potential vendors as well.
Side by side with historical VMware partners, at least 100 new companies showed up this year.
Built from scratch or fully recommitted to virtualization, from day to night the number of firms that claim a space in the virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Radar is doubled.

This leads to the first consideration: finding the right solution is becoming truly challenging.
In an overcrowded market where each segment has 10-15 competitors, the only choice for the end-users is to rely on solution providers that can select the best products for them. But even them have a hard time to evaluate so many offerings.
Additionally, the number of solutions provider focused on virtualization is growing exponentially as the profit opportunity right now is huge.

Of course in such saturated space there are few chances to have many firms bringing in true innovation.
Most of them are just copying each other with similar feature sets, so the only point of competition is the price.
So in the coming months each vendor is urged to clarify, by a good amount of details, why and how its solution is better or more innovative than the others. Any marketing department failing in this critical task will have few chances to win the prospects.

But where the partners are focusing in details? Everywhere.
It seems that most companies morph their mission statement every quarter, significantly extending or completely replacing their product portfolio immediately after printing the market brochures.

The corporate identity of many firms is suffering as customers can’t keep the pace with who does what, and hearing “we can do that as well” from every vendor is not a reassuring message.

Most of them still see VDI and client-side virtualization as the biggest profit opportunity (maybe because NEC and VMware announced the biggest VDI implementation ever with 12,000 virtual desktops managed by just 3 people):

  • Virtual Computer, the US startup founded by Virtual Iron’s former CTO, announced an enhanced VDI management system, NxTop, that offers large-scale deployment, configuration and patching capabilities (even more than the upcoming VMware View platform previewed on stage at VMworld).
  • Desktone, the US startup focused on hosted VDI that launched in April, and WYSE, one of the leaders in the thin clients arena, announced a joint effort (Desktone dtFlash + WYSE TCX Multimedia) to bring Flash technology on virtual desktops somewhere in the future.
  • RingCube, the US startup that tried to win the consumer market with its MojoPac in the last two years, turned its attention to the enterprise and announced vDesk, an enterprise security wrapper that seems similar to Kidaro Managed Workspaces (acquired by Microsoft in April).
    The new product, available now at $200 per concurrent desktop, can also integrate with VMware Virtual Desktop Manager (VDM).
  • Leostream, one of the oldest virtualization firm focused on VDI, announced a distribution and support agreement with IBM, so that its connection broker will be sold with the BladeCenter HC10 Workstation Blade.

Many of them recognizes in disaster recovery the endless source of profit:

  • Trilead, a brand new European startup based in Switzerland, just entered the virtual machines backup/restore segment and launched the first beta of its VM Explorer.
    The product currently supports VMware hypervisor only, it’s able to do backup/restore to/from a generic Linux/FreeBSD storage server or ESX to ESX copy, and even basic multi-host management.
  • Vizioncore previewed vRanger 4.0, introducing a new service-based architecture and a very interesting API set for 3rd party developers.
  • PlateSpin released its disaster recovery appliance Forge 2.0, now featuring support for SAN arrays and multiple recovery points.

A bunch of bright companies (many coming from the security industry) understood that configuration auditing is going to be one of the biggest need in every fairly-large virtual data center:

  • Configuresoft announced a free of charge Compliance Checker, that verifies the security configuration of any VMware Infrastructure against the VMware Infrastructure 3 Security Hardening Guidelines and the Center for Internet Security (CIS) VMware ESX Server Benchmark.
  • Splunk announced that its system event manager now fully supports VMware Infrastructure 3.5, and that the virtual appliance edition is immediately available free of charge.
  • Tripwire announced that its new configuration auditing solution, Tripwire Enterprise 7.5V, fully supports ESX and VirtualCenter, offering VM sprawl control capabilities and virtual infrastructu

    re objects automated discovery.

  • Sourcefire announced that will leverage the VMsafe APIs in upcoming versions of its intrusion detection system RNA.

Few partners are finally seeing the need for chargeback in virtual infrastructures:

  • Nicus Software, a small US firm exclusively focused on chargeback since 14 years, announced that its product M-PWR now supports VMware VirtualCenter, providing service based pricing, tiered rates, measured resource usage, direct costs and high and low level allocations.
  • Vizioncore announced that its vCharter (now called vFoglight) will offer chargeback capabilities in Q4, including tiered, flat rate, resource utilization and direct cost models.

Just a couple of companies saw the opportunity in virtual data center orchestration, despite the VMware acquisition of Dunes Technologies emptied the segment:

  • Vizioncore announced a brand new product called vAutomation Suite, which offers cross-platform management, a workflow for datacenter automation and a policy-based lifecycle management engine.
  • BMC announced a major agreement with VMware to integrate its Remedy IT Service Management (ITSM) and Atrium Orchestrator (formerly BMC Run Book Automation) with Lifecycle Manager (now called vCenter Lifecycle Manager).

Physical to virtual migration is a segment with still some activity, despite almost every major virtualization vendor is now offering P2V/V2V migration tools for free with their hypervisors:

  • Vizioncore released the fourth version of its vOptimizer, introducing very interesting features like a partial migration (to verify the virtual machine performance before abandoning the physical system) and the continuous migration (a V2V migration technique used for disaster recovery).

Capacity planning comes even before P2V migration, but still few companies are focusing their efforts on this segment:

  • PERFMAN announced that the new 7.2 version of its product now sports a Virtualization Planning Tool, that offers a “what-if” modeling to predict system performance under new workloads and existing workload performance on new hardware.

Until VMsafe APIs come up, security remains a fairly empty space, with most competitors still busy with traditional hardening/detection/clean-up practices inside the guest OSes rather than anything else:

  • McAfee announced that its Total Protection suite will extend its shield to virtual environments in Q4, also scanning offline virtual machine files against viruses.
  • Catbird announced its V-Security 2.0, introducing a compliance enforcer that supports VMotion.

And closing, a least a visionary company already followed VMware in the cloudy sky:

  • Skytap, the US startup focused on hosted virtual lab automation that launched in April, announced its forthcoming support for the VMware vCloud initiative. This means that both companies will work together to standardize their APIs and make possible federated clouds somewhere in the future.
    More concretely, Skytap announced the availability of a web service which allows customers to integrate the hosted VLA service with their local infrastructures.

In the third part, we’ll close this wrap-up analyzing what the VMware competitors announced to counter the overwhelming call to action summoned by this VMworld.

VMworld 2008 wrap-up – Part 1

This year’s VMware conference, VMworld 2008, broke all records with over 14,000 delegates and over 200 partners / competitors exhibiting.

As already written, understanding what really happened it’s impossible when looking at every single press announcement on its own.
There was a big need to collect all data, digest it, and try to figure out where the virtualization industry is going.


VMware is going away, on clouds.

As Micheal Keen, Mike Laverick, Massimo Re Ferrè and many other influencers have noted on their reports of the event, VMware pushed more than enough the cloud computing vision, clarifying that it wants a piece of the pie that Amazon has cooked and it’s eating all alone.

Of course, knowing that the company is working to drive the IT to the perfect world of the on-demand, ubiquitous computing it’s pleasing and exciting
A couple of years ago virtualization.info wrote that virtualization is just the first step of a long walk called grid computing.
We also published an article predicting that VMware would move on clouds as soon as Microsoft would step in the virtualization market with some concrete investments (and this because Microsoft wouldn’t be able to follow VMware on clouds for another ten years, giving the EMC subsidiary enough oxygen to stay ahead of the competition).

Nonetheless the message sounded very weak.

We need a vision. Made by human beings, the market ecosystem has to look forward and focus its energy on new technologies while selling/adopting the current ones.
In the past conferences, when VMware failed to tell its vision we complained and demanded for more. But there’s a limit: going too forward may confuse what is possible (and desirable) with what is just marketing hype-able.

In the Q&A session following his opening keynote, Maritz said that the company expect this future to concretize by a couple of years. From here it seems much farther away, like eight-ten years from now.

And looking at those 14,000 delegates we wonder how many of them were SMBs (let’s say 50% ?) and how many among those SMBs really care about embracing the cloud computing approach.

VMware is sure that SMBs will find such revolutionary architecture attractive because, at the first approach, it will offer them a cheap way to implement disaster recovery sites.
But we see a number of small companies still ignoring what capacity planning is, still struggling with P2V migrations, still figuring out if virtualization adoption really saves their money, etc.
More than that we see poor quality work done by many solutions providers that undermine the confidence in the technology and eventually drive the small firms back to the physical world.

Let’s skip the discussion about enterprises, where regulatory compliance and clouds can’t actually stand together in the same sentence (and hardly will do in the next two years).

In other words, if could computing is Virtualization 3.0 (as some over-zealous PR folks are already pitching), it seems that many companies are still at 0.9.

But let’s put aside for a minute any discussion about the feasibility of the vision and its go-to-mainstream timing.

This year’s VMworld was very special as the company:

  • has a brand new CEO
  • just lost both its co-founders (the CEO Diane Greene and the Chief Scientist Mendel Rosenblum)
  • is losing some key executives
  • is facing a much negative performance at Wall Street
  • is facing harsh competition (perceived or real it doesn’t matter) from Microsoft

In such impressive conjunction of events, one would expect the new CEO Paul Maritz coming on stage and telling to the company’s customers who he is, why he’s the right person to lead the company and that, at least, he has a solid plan for the next couple of quarters.

It’s early indeed: he took the new position just two months and a half ago, but not even a mention about the upcoming strategy?
Maritz repeated 35 times the word cloud (as somebody was picky enough to note) and couldn’t even spend a single sentence on how he plans to solve the problems that his company has today.

After his keynote VMW stock value had a significant drop. Is it legit to wonder why?

PostVMworld_VMW

Luckily, the engine behind so many impalpable clouds is ESX, and the ESX 4.0 sneak preview that Steve Herrod, CTO, showed on stage was both concrete and thrilling.

With this upcoming release, VMware will demonstrate more than ever how virtualization is an amazing tool that can transform every segment of the IT.

If a company can afford the price (and this is the only point of the whole question, since ever), then VMware Fault Tolerance (formerly continuous availability), VMsafe, AppSpeed, Virtual Distributed Networking, and a number of additional features that stay unveiled for now, will introduce some serious innovation in its data center.

Some of these things may be still in early stage: as Rich Miller and Christopher Hoff promptly noted, the security ecosystem was surprisingly silent during VMworld around VMsafe, and Cisco couldn’t even announce the beta of its upcoming virtual switch for the Virtual Distributed Networking.
But even delivering in mid-2009, the VMware’s competition seems so far away right now.

Unfortunately this has a downside: the more VI 4 shines on stage, the more concerns it raises on the exhibit floor where 206 partners are telling stories about synergy and integration.

vCenter 4.0 (formerly VirtualCenter) is about to include a series of new modules that cover pretty much every need in the virtualization space, from chargeback to orchestration.
Every company that is trying to add value on top of the VMware management layer, may soon have a hard time to justify its existence.

Of course VMware reassures the partners promising flexible APIs and a friendly, cooperative go-to-mar
ket
strategy, but the partners still remember the terrible experience with VDI in 2007, when the company first fed and promoted a healthy ecosystem and then killed it by acquiring one of the players (Propero).

On stage Steve Herrod basically previewed how VMware is about to invade all the spaces, and it’s hard to believe that a customer would prefer dealing with two vendors (which implies different licensing and support agreements) when it can have all the features he needs from the market incumbent.

So now the partners basically have two choices: stay loyal to VMware and focus their R&D investment on vCenter, in the only hope that they will develop some groundbreaking capability worthwhile of an acquisition, or re-tune their efforts for a more cross-platform strategy, where Microsoft (and the lack of features of Hyper-V and SCVMM) suddenly appears more attractive than ever.

Easily to guess, over the long term every vendor would look at Microsoft platform with interest. But nobody has unlimited resources to invest in development.
A vCenter that does everything just facilitates all those partnership deals with Microsoft that could be postponed by a year or two.

Relevant VMware press announcements:

In the second part of this wrap-up we’ll see where the rest of the virtualization industry is going while VMware is headed to the clouds.

VMworld 2008 ends, virtualization.info wrap-up coming soon

With thousands of delegates attending (more than 14,000 this year), the VMworld conference has a unique capability to call to action almost every virtualization vendor in the industry, happy to fight for a few minutes of attention.

The result is that in just three days over 200 press announcements were released.
Only a small portion of them contain really valuable information (products’ general availability, alliances, support agreements), while the others are just part of a generic “me too” effort (announcements of a future general availability, reissues of old announcements, claim of presence, etc.)

Nobody, and less then ever the 14,000 people busy in attending the VMware breakout sessions, would be able to read, filter and digest such amount of information as they are fired up (and this should urge the vendors’ PR and marketing departments to severely reconsider their strategy during these events).

Nonetheless we still have over 200 press announcements in queue.

Rather than publishing all of them as they are, virtualization.info will publish a comprehensive wrap-up later this week, trying to highlight the current state of the industry and the direction that it’s taking.

There’s a lot to say this year.

Live from VMworld 2008: Day 2 – VMware Keynote

Second day at VMworld 2008 in Las Vegas.

Today VMware’s CTO, Steve Herrod, will give the opening keynote, introducing the upcoming ESX 4.0.
virtualization.info already revealed some of the biggest features coming with this new major release (and some readers unveiled more in the comments).

Yesterday Cisco finally announced its virtual switch for ESX, so Herrod may show it in action today for the first time.

Steve Herrod on stage.

He starts from the new Virtual Data Center OS (VDC-OS) introduced by Paul Maritz yesterday, covering all the layers that makes it.

At the infrastructure layer, the capability to manage the physical hardware (vCompute) will get major improvements compared to what’s available today:

  • 8 virtual CPUs
  • 256GB per VM
  • 40 GB/s network throughput
  • up to 64 nodes per cluster
  • up to 4096 cores to manage
  • full support for Distributed Power Management (DPM), which saves 50% Watts consumption during VMwark benchmarks

The capability to grant available and reliable virtual machines (vStorage) will extend VMFS and Storage VMotion with new features :

  • storage thin provisioning
  • linked clones

The capability to abstract and manage the networking (vNetwork) will get the biggest boost in terms of features:

  • virtual distributed networking (same virtual switching configuration across the virtualization hosts, supporting VMotion)
  • 3rd party virtual switches (Cisco Nexus 1000V is the first)

Now Herrod moves to the Application layer of the VDC-OS.

Here VMware, as announced yesterday, enhance the concept of virtual appliance in the new vApp: a virtual machine that has metadata describing its properties in terms of availability, security and SLA.

Talking about the availability Herrod introduces the much expected Continuous Availability feature that Mendel Rosenblum, the former Chief Scientist, previewed last year at VMworld.

The feature is now called VMware Fault Tolerance but its amazing behavior doesn’t: a VM hosted on a physical machine and protected by FT is copied over the wire (isn’t clear at the moment if this will be supported over WAN) and synchronized on another host on continuous basis, granting no downtime in case of hardware fault.

Demo time: A single right-click in the VirtualCenter 4.0 user interface on any virtual machine activates the Fault Tolerance.
A physical server hosting a VM with a gambling game on it is powered off on stage. Despite that the VM continues to work, as its copy on a secondary host was in sync and ready to take over.

Herrod continues its presentation of the application layer and moves to security capabilities: ESX 4.0 will feature the much expected VMsafe APIs, integrating with the new vNetwork Distributed Switch.
No demo here, and not much more informations.

Herrod now moves to the third key layer of the VDC-OS: the vManagement.

There are big news here: VirtualCenter becomes vCenter and is about to get a number of modules to accomplish almost every task in the virtual infrastructure: orchestration, chargeback, application performance optimization and more.

This last module is called AppSpeed: it controls the performance of a workload and when it goes below a certain SLA) vCenter can automatically provision more instances to address the demand.

More than that, AppSpeed is able to breakdown the different aspects of a virtual workload telling exactly where the performance bottleneck is (network, storage, etc.).
This allows vCenter to suggest what action to take to recover the performance (example: add a new virtual CPU).

Herrod says that VMware is working to make vCenter more available: the server component will run on Linux as virtual appliance (big applause on this one) and the client UI will be available for multiple platforms (an iPhone appears in the slide).

Time to clarify how this new VMware Infrastructure 4 will fit the new cloud computing strategy.

VMware will release vCloud APIs, providing to 3rd parties plugs for image management, user accounts management, chargeback and virtual machines mobility.

On top of that VMware is working with several partners on federation, as announced yesterday, to allow vApps  different clouds implementations compatible and .

Herrod is near the end of his keynote and closes talking about the new vClient initiative (which extends the current VDI approach) and the upcoming VMware View technology.

Here VMware will work on user experience, by co-developing a more efficient remote desktop protocol with Teradici.
More than that, VMware will bring the hypervisor on workstations and taking care of local peripherals (like the GPU) virtualization.

Demo time: Through the new VMware View and its management tool called Composer, a single VM is cloned 25 times (linked clones) with a single script in few seconds (one each 2 seconds).

Now the new Google Chrome browser is pushed to all the just created virtual machines, by just adding it to the original, master VM.

The update propagates to all VMs including one hosted by the new client hypervisor installed on a laptop.
The client hypervisor informs the user inside his VM that a new update is available and requires to reboot the desktop. Once done the new Google Chrome is there.

The demo continues with another task: centrally manage the virtual desktop access.
The Virtual Desktop Manager (VDM) allows to define which security policy to apply to any deployed virtual desktop. Once defined it, the VDM communicates with the client hypervisor and obliges the user to shut down his virtual machine.
Nothing new here: VMware took the features included in its existing product ACE and merged with VDM and the client hypervisor, but the audience seems much impressed.

The session is over. The amount of features announced is remarkable and makes the upcoming VMware Infrastructure 4.0 much ahead of the competition.
VMware FT, vNetwork Distributed Switch (and the Cisco virtual switch), VMsafe and AppSpeed may really justify the investment (as long as VMware doesn’t go too far with the pricing) for many enterprises.

Herrod didn’t provide any timeframe but virtualization.info knows that ESX 4.0 is already in beta 2.
After this preview many companies evaluating other platforms may want to extend their trials and wait to see how they compare to the new VMware offering.

There are many points in the strategy that need clarification anyway: the capabilities that vCenter is getting for example put in serious discussion the current relationship that VMware has with many partners.
Of course they may be able to innovate on top of the new platform (like Citrix does with Microsoft Terminal Services) but the entry cost for doing so will become very high, and many companies may find easier to jump on other bandwagons where the lack of features give them more chances to sell.

Live from VMworld 2008: Day 1 – Cisco Keynote

This year, instead of invading VMware opening keynotes, the Platinum sponsors have their own presentations, at different times, and delegates can decide to attend instead of VMware breakout session.

One of the most awaited partner keynote is the Cisco one, because today Cisco is expected to unveil its virtual switch for the upcoming ESX 4.0.

Ed Bugnion, VP and CTO of Server Access and Virtualization Business Unit at Cisco (and former VMware co-founder and CTO), first clarifies how the network challenges are changing: customers need network access control defined per virtual machine, consistent policies across all the networking equipment and all virtualization hosts (even if you move a VM with VMotion), higher capacity links for highly consolidated environments, etc.

To address these new challenges Cisco announces the VN-Link initiative.

VN-Link is delivered through the new virtual switch Nexus 1000V, a piece of software built on NX-OS, that plugs into ESX and that can be configured through the familiar Cisco command line interface.

Cisco will deliver this product in 1H 2009.

Even if Bugnion didn’t say it, there’s a beta program available for this product: enroll for it here.

Steve Herrod, Vice President of Technology Development at VMware, takes the stage.

He announces that Nexus 1000V will be open for 3rd party plug-ins, and that the two companies are working together to integrate Cisco TrustSec and VMware VMsafe.

Herrod says that more details will be revealed tomorrow in the second day keynote.
So stay tuned for the live coverage tomorrow!

Live from VMworld 2008: Day 1 – VMware Keynote

As usual, virtualization.info will provide a live coverage of the opening keynotes at VMworld.

The brand new VMware CEO, Paul Maritz, is on stage.

He starts with a short recap of the IT history, and of the VMware story, mentioning both Diane Greene and Mendel Rosenblum, both out of the company, for their contribution (surprisingly, no applause from the audience).

To describe the evolution of VMware products over the last 10 years the slides show three branches that,  somewhere after 2008, will merge into a single thing.

Maritz introduces the three technology domains that VMware sees matching those three branches to become one: the Virtual Datacenter OS (VDC-OS), the vCloud and the vClient.

To justify the need for a new software platform that is elastic, self-managing and self-healing, Maritz points out the impossibility to provision in a proper and prompt way the application workloads depending on the business needs.

The upcoming VMware’s VDC-OS depends on physical hardware capabilities (vCompute), Intel FlexMigration is mentioned, on virtual hardware extensibility (vNetwork), Cisco virtual switches are mentioned (we’ll cover the Cisco keynote later today), on storage availability and reliability (vStorage).

The Virtual Datacenter OS is made to run workloads of course, and Maritz describes how the company is moving from the Virtual Appliances to the vApps, an evolution of the pre-configured VMs that we have today, able to match security, manageability and availability requirements more easily.

The Virtual Datacenter OS and its vApps must be managed, so Maritz introduces the vManagement concept: an extensible management framework where 3rd party vendors (BMC, CA, IBM, etc.) can plug into to add value on top of Virtual Center.

Now VMware’s CEO move on the vCloud concept. He announces that over 100 service providers (including BT, Verizon, Sunguard and T-Systems) are working with the company to deploy federated vApps.

Demo time: a system administrator downloads a virtual appliance (vApp in the future) from the VMware Marketplace and defines a business policy for it before deploying: the SLA must be less than 4 seconds, if the condition is not satisfied then a cloud for that application must be built on the fly to address the workload demand in a transparent way.
The virtual appliance is loaded and put on heavy pressure until it surpass the SLA threshold. At that point the VMware Infrastructure spawns new instances of it to recover the performance level required.

Last part of the Maritz story: the vClient.

The company is working to move from the concept of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) to a new thing called VMware View.

In desktop environments the end user experience and productivity is the key so VMware is working on something to define the OS, the applications and the storage of a desktop environment as user properties. These properties follow the user on any physical platform he uses (a thin client, a standard PC, a mobile device, etc.).

Demo time: an end user plugs a USB key into a laptop which boots the operating system inside it (it seems a Linux distribution). The minimal OS just launches a Virtual Desktop Manager client to reach a virtual workstation somewhere in the VMware Infrastructure.
Once there, the end user is welcome to launch a 3D game and enjoy a smooth rendering.

The visionary keynote is almost finished.
Maritz could just touch the fascinating, epic and extremely complex vision that VMware wants to realize. But what he presented is enough to reveal a profound fracture between his company and the current competitors: never like today VMware seems far, far away from the small business market and fully committed just to the highest-end of the enterprise segment.

Just to summarize: VMware is moving the current hardware, including servers, workstations and storage, to the cloud.
virtualization.info is suggesting that VMware would start moving to cloud computing as soon as Microsoft would enter the market for serious competition. Here we go now.

Now the question really is if the market is ready to follow.
For now the answer in not exactly positive:

VMW_VMworld2008

The session is finished but virtualization.info will also cover some of the other sponsors keynotes (Cisco is one of them) due today.
Additionally, we’ll provide the coverage for tomorrow’s keynote, performed by Steve Herrod, CTO at VMware, and for the Paul Maritz Q&A session.

Stay with us!

What to expect at VMworld: ESX 4.0 beta, Intel six-core CPUs, and maybe Cisco virtual switches

This year the VMworld US conference broken all records for a virtualization conference: 14,000 delegates.

In front of them the new CEO Paul Maritz may have a hard time explaining why the company co-founder and Chief Scientist, Mendel Rosenblum, resigned or why the Executive Vice President of R&D returned to Oracle after less than one year or why ESX 3.5 Update 2 was mistakenly timebombed.

But Maritz may have something serious to distract the audience: ESX 4.0.

The product is currently in private beta and just a small, selected list of testers can access it.
Nonetheless virtualization.info has a partial list of the new, remarkable features included in the first beta build:

  • 64bit kernel and console operating system (COS)
  • clustered VirtualCenter Servers
  • ESX hosts profile management
  • cross-hosts virtual networking
  • 8-way virtual SMP
  • virtual machines fault tolerance across multiple hosts (the famous Continuous Availability presented last year)
  • VMs and media library
  • alarms on physical hardware faults
  • access control on storage resources
  • configuration change tracking
  • full support for SATA local storage

We were informed that this is just a small list. And it seems already enough to keep the whole audience engaged for the entire event.

 

To help VMware in reducing to silence the rumor generated by Microsoft and its partners with the Monday launch of Hyper-V 1.0, Intel is expected to announce its six-core CPU, codename Dunnington (Xeon 7400), supported by the new ESX.

The new 45nm CPU will have a monolithic design and a much bigger cache (3MB Level 2 and a shared 16MB Level 3) to boost performance, Intel says close to 50% increase, and serve more virtual machines at the same time.

Last but not least, Cisco may have something really big to say to close any discussion. 
(please note that his last point is totally unconfirmed at the moment)

Over one year ago, in time for the the VMworld 2007, virtualization.info published an article about the upcoming release of 3rd parties virtual switches for VMware ESX.
Following the rumors from trusted sources, it seemed perfectly logical that Cisco would be interested in releasing a virtual version of its Catalyst that customers could plug into ESX to enhance the limited networking capabilities that VMware offers today.

So far nor Cisco neither other networking vendors ever released such virtual equipment, but just two days ago an interesting comment appeared on our one-year-old post:

Will be announced on sept 16th. It will run NX class software and will offer cross host virtualization. 

It may be just a rumor or a prediction but Cisco actually has a keynote scheduled for Sep. 16, and in the last period it acted in a pretty strange way.

We’d suggest to keep an eye open on them while at VMworld.

Quest/Provision Networks releases serious enhancements for Microsoft RDP

Despite Quest is not a company directly focused on virtualization, its acquisition of Provision Networks didn’t swamp at all the small startup focused on desktop virtualization and VDI.

Au contraire: after the acquisition, Provision Networks continued to achieve remarkable successes like signing a major OEM agreement with Parallels in June or releasing the first connection broker supporting Microsoft Hyper-V in July.

It’s clear that the company aims at becoming the cross-platform VDI leader, but to do so has to provide  something really innovative to overcome the well-known technical issues plaguing any virtual desktop infrastructure.

Provision Networks starts from the inadequacy of the current remote desktop protocols, releasing a performance enhancer for Microsoft RDP.

Delivered through a Desktop Optimization Pack, this new software accelerates the multimedia tasks and reduces the overall connection latency. Additionally it provides bi-direction audio.

The company claims a 8x compression factor for RDP sessions.
The videos are pretty eloquent so Provision Networks may have something serious to discuss with Microsoft now.

The pack is available now as part of the refreshed Virtual Access Suite (VAS) 5.10 originally released in July.