Release: CiRBA Data Center Intelligence 5.0

The Canadian company CiRBA launches today the newest version of Data Center Intelligence (DCI).

DCI is more than a static capacity planning tool useful only for the first P2V migration phase: it monitors the virtual infrastructure on continuous basis and suggests the virtual machines best arrangement across virtualization hosts at any moment, depending on several factors that customers can specify with rules.

DCI50

Depending on which rules an operator can write, DCI can suggest different placements, so the product may become complex to use in the proper way.
To accomplish the task in an easier way this new major release introduces a set of predefined and customizable analysis templates, including:

  • Financial Analysis 
    DCI 5.0 introduces integrated financial analysis by enabling the results of an analysis to be directly inserted into any Excel-based financial model.  CiRBA 5.0 includes a default model that provides a comprehensive TCO/ROI calculation, factoring in both capital and operational savings, applying hardware, power, facilities and staff costs to analysis results to determine the true financial profile of each strategy being considered.
  • Power Consumption Analysis 
    DCI 5.0 provides the ability to analyze both measured and estimated power draw for individual IT systems, and rolls these measures up to overall utilization for groups of servers and entire data centers.

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

Neocleus secures $11 million in Series B funding

The US startup Neocleus was announced just one month ago, has yet to deliver its first product and, as often happens these days, already secured a second round of investments.

The first round, $5 million, was granted by Battery Ventures and Gemini Isreal in 2007.
This second one, $11.4 million, is provided by the same venture capital firms.

Neocleus is the first virtualization vendor that tries to pitch a hypervisor (based on Xen) for desktops instead of servers, so it’s easy to imagine the interest that the company raised.
Despite that there’s still no mention on when their product will be released.

HP and VMware now in tight integration partnership

The recent deal to integrate Citrix XenServer with ProLiant servers user interface must be not enough for HP (or maybe it’s VMware the unsatisfied one).

Today the OEM vendor announced an agreement with VMware to deliver a wide range of virtualization-aware products:

  • HP Business Availability Center
  • HP Operations Center
  • HP Network Management Center
  • HP Discovery and Dependency Mapping
  • HP Universal CMDB
  • HP Server Automation Center
  • HP Client Automation
  • HP Operations Orchestration

Additionally, HP will deliver a version of HP Insight Control Environment which integrates VMware Infrastructure 3 and other undisclosed automation tools.
This will certainly go much further than the current iVirtualization initiative to sell ProLiant machines with ESXi.

Microsoft Application Virtualization 4.5 reaches Release Candidate status

The newest version of SoftGrid, rebranded Application Virtualization (and App-V if one name is not enough for you), is almost finished.

Today Microsoft releases the first Release Candidate which introduces a number of new features like:

  • HTTP streaming
    Virtual applications can be streamed from an IIS server 6 or 7
  • New GUI for Sequencer
  • Sequencer support for MSI packages
    The Sequencer now supports the creation of MSI packages, eliminating the need for a server environment
  • Reporting
    Offline usage of applications or usage of applications when streaming from different sources is now accounted in the Application Virtualization database
  • Support for System Center Operation Manager (SCOM) 2008 
    A Management Pack for SCOM 2008 is now available.

Application Virtualization 4.5 will be available only through the Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP) for those customers that subscribe the Software Assurance. The others can only continue complaining.

Enroll for the beta here.

Qumranet works on virtual desktop relocation to improve VDI performance

Qumranet, the US startup launched in November 2007, is already well-known for its efforts in improving the end user experience in VDI environments: the SPICE remote desktop protocol which powers its Solid ICE product was written from scratch to address the RDP and ICA shortcomings.

Now the company reveals that it’s working on another technology to further improve the SPICE performance.

The new feature, called SPLICE (easy to confuse with their SPICE protocol), will address the latency issues suffered by end users which access a virtual desktop from a distant WAN location (e.g.: a branch office).
To limit the performance impact, SPLICE will be able to transparently relocate a virtual desktop from the headquarter to the branch office.

At the moment Qumranet doesn’t reveal any further detail about how this will happen, but informs that SPLICE will be included in a special product called Solid ICE Multi-site, soon available as technical preview.

To use this feature customers will probably have to build an architecture which has multiple Solid ICE servers, one at the headquarter and one for each remote location.

virtualization.info will post additional details as soon as possible.

Release: Parallels Server 1.0

Parallels, formerly known as SWsoft, has finally released its own hypervisor.

Parallels Server 1.0 is the first server virtualization platform able to officially support Apple machines (both Xserve and Mac Pro) as bare-metal hardware and Mac OS X 10.5 Server as guest operating system.

The product, which requires Intel VT and AMD-V CPU enhancements, features:

  • support for 32bit and 64bit VMs
  • support for up to 4 virtual CPUs per VM
  • support for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X (only on Apple hardware) guest operating systems
  • support for up to 32GB of physical RAM
  • a management console and CLI which can be scripted and extended through Python

ParallelsServer10

Additionally, Parallels Server includes the physical to virtual (P2V) and V2V migration tool already seen in consumer products: Transporter.

Today Parallels releases only the Mac OS version and this creates some confusion: if the product is a bare-metal hypervisor why it’s marketed in two different versions?

The company official announcement doesn’t help at all:

(Parallels Server) Supports virtualizing Mac OS X Leopard Server in a virtual machine running on a Mac OS X Leopard Server platform

This statement describes a hosted solution and not a bare-metal one.

Maybe Parallels Server adopts an architecture similar to the one used by Xen-based (like Citrix XenServer or Sun xVM Server), Microsoft Hyper-V hypervisors.
In such architectures the so called parent partition (the first VM booted by the hypervisor) has to run a specific guest opeating which controls and manage the interaction between the other VMs and the physical hardware.

In this case Parallels probably offers two versions of its hypervisor, one for the Apple market, which launches Mac OS X Server in the parent partition, and one for the other markets, which launches Linux (or Windows).

virtualization.info will update this post with more details about the product architecture as soon as possible.

This version is priced $999 for an unlimited number of cores.
The release timeframe and pricing for the non-Mac OS version is unknown but should follow soon.

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

Release: Xenocode Virtual Application Studio 2008

The number of firms entering the application virtualization market these days is impressive. Just few hours ago virtualization.info included Ceedo in its Virtualization Industry Radar. Now we move on Xenocode.

The company was founded in 2002 but so far it primarily focused on .NET code obfuscation with a product called Postbuild.
Such product was already able to virtualize the managed code for an easier deployment so was easier for the company to target a wider audience.

Now Xenocode extended its virtualization capabilities to any application, Windows binary or .NET/Java code, offered in a packaging solution called Virtual Application Studio.

Like many competitors this product offers a fully virtualized environment which abstracts the file system, the registry, the processes and threads.
After the packaging Virtual Application Studio is able to generate virtual executables which don’t require administrative privileges to run or .MSI installers.
The overhead per application is around 400Kb.

xenocode 

Xenocode virtual applications don’t require any agent installed on clients to be deployed and don’t have any other complex requirement like an Active Directory infrastructure.
It’s also possible to run the applications from a USB key or to stream them from a network share (it’s not clear if this last feature require any 3rd party streaming capability).

Xenocode doesn’t provide any enterprise management feature that many competitor decided to offer.
The company prefers to rely on 3rd party management products like Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM), Novell ZENWorks or CA Unicenter to distribute its packages.

Virtual Application Studio uses a per-user licensing model. The pricing for the application and 5 licenses (which the company calls a Starter Kit) is $499. Each additional license costs $40.

Download a trial here.

Xenocode has been included in the virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Radar.
The Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

Release: Ceedo Enterprise 2.5

Ceedo is an Israeli startup focused on application virtualization.

The company, funded by Intel Capital, was founded in 2005 by Dror Wettenstein.

In November Ceedo launched a product for consumers, Ceedo Personal, which presents an unusual approach: instead of blending virtual applications in the operating system, it collects them in a dedicated menu, called Easy Access Menu, which mimics (but doesn’t replace) the Windows one.

ceedo  

The product supports Windows XP and Vista and can be run from a USB key. In fact Lexar resells the solution under the name PowerToGo.

Now Ceedo releases an enterprise version of its platform, which allows to deploy/update/remove new virtual applications or define virtual workspaces policies from a centralized management system.

The company pricing starts from $89 per seat (with a perpetual license).

Download a trial here.

Ceedo has been included in the virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Radar.
The Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

Is Microsoft Application Virtualization or App-V?

The easy to say and to remember SoftGrid product, acquired by Microsoft in 2006, has now two names: the long one, Application Virtualization, and the new short one, App-V.

The use of category names for a product is already confusing enough: the newest application virtualization product from Microsoft is called Application Virtualization, while the newest virtual machines security wrapper is called Enterprise Desktop Virtualization (formerly Managed Workspaces, acquired from Kidaro in 2008).

But having two official names is even worse: App-V is a short and easy name which pairs nicely with the upcoming Hyper-V (which should be called HW-V at this point), and may be easily accompanied by a future OS-V (as soon as Microsoft will finally invest in the OS virtualization approach).

Obviously Microsoft is not the only one playing with generic names: VMware, Parallels, Veeam, Leostream and others are with the Redmond brand managers.

Isn’t virtualization a topic complex enough?

Novell may complete the PlateSpin integration by the end of 2008

One of the biggest question raised after the Novell acquisition of PlateSpin in Februrary was: how much time the company will need to integrate the virtualization firm technologies?

PlateSpin products in fact are, as far as we know, 100% developed with Microsoft technologies which are not exactly easy to integrate with the Java-based enterprise management product ZENWorks.

While a code blend isn’t a mandatory step, it seems hard to believe that Novell wants to maintain .NET applications over the long term (even if it has a strong partnership with Microsoft).
Therefore a very long integration process is expected.

Now CRN publishes an article where Jill Henry, Director of UK Channel Development at Novell, reveals that the integration may complete by the end of this year.

She’s probably referring to the branding and sales channels only, so far PlateSpin continued to operate as an independent subsidiary, keeping its brand and its website. But it’s the first step for a complete technology integration.