Quest/Vizioncore opens the vRanger Pro 4.0 beta program

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Not happy enough to enter a new market segment with vControl, Vizioncore is very busy developing the next major release of its flagship product: vRanger Pro.

This version four of vRanger Pro is dubbed Data Protection Platform (DPP) and will be released in three phases during 2010 over the next 12 months.
The new features that it will offer include:

  • Direct to target architecture
  • Instant File Level Restore
  • Support for backup and restore to/from SFTP and CIFS repositories
  • Resource Manager to control throughput
  • Support for PowerShell
  • Support for VMware vSphere

The company VP of Support and Product Management, Jason Mattox, writes on the new corporate blog, Vizioncorum, to provide some details about the new Direct to Target architecture:

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VKernel secures $7 million in series B funding

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A couple of weeks ago VKernel, the hyperactive US startup that launched in October 2007, secured a second round of funding: $7 million provided by Longworth Venture Partners, Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and Polaris Venture Partners.

The previous round, dated was led by Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and Polaris Venture Partners for as much as $4.6 million in February 2008.

As result, the VKernel board of directors welcomes a couple of new members: Nilanjana Bhowmik, Partner at Longworth Venture Partners, and Doug McNary, the former CEO of Onaro (acquired by NetApp in 2008).

Virtualization is not ready for highly regulated, mission critical apps says IBM security strategist

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Last week every major IT news portal (like NetworkWorld) quoted the words of Joshua Corman, Principal Security Strategist at IBM Internet Security Systems (aka ISS, the popular security firm that IBM acquired in 2006 for $1.3 billion).

At the Interop conference in Las Vegas Corman said something that other security and virtualization experts are saying since a long time:

x86 virtualization is often a risky proposition for highly regulated, mission-critical applications, because people and processes are not ready for virtualization and the security risks it introduces

Corman also recommended to not use a Type-2 Virtual Machine Monitor (VMM) for production use, and only rely on hypervisors.
It will be interesting to see the KVM and Linux community reaction to this claim.

EMC acquires Configuresoft

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After the acquisition of some of the jewels of the IT industry, like VMware (in 2003 for $635 million) and RSA (in 2006 for $2.1 billion), plus an endless number of other interesting vendors, EMC slowed down its pace in 2008. But the worldwide financial crisis represents a great time to restart the shopping season and close amazing deals.

So last week EMC announced the acquisition of Configuresoft, a configuration management company that started to focus on virtualization and VMware in early 2008.
The price paid for this deal was not disclosed.

The main reason behind the operation is the OEM relationship which already exists between the two companies, where EMC is selling Configuresoft technologies as Server Configuration Manager (SCM) and Configuration Analytics Manager (CIA).
But considering that EMC is the parent company of VMware, parts of the Configuresoft intellectual property may go to the subsidiary which may find them extremely useful to enrich its vCenter Suite.

VMware invests $20 million in Terremark

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For the first time in its history VMware invested $20 million in a hosting provider: Terremark.

So far the vendor acquired several startups, most of them offering virtualization solutions that integrate with VMware Infrastructure. With a couple of exceptions VMware also acquire a software house, Sciant, and a consulting company, Foedus.

It’s very likely that VMware wants Terremark to become the cloud computing provider that unleashes vSphere 4.0 against Amazon and its EC2, which is based on Xen and may be sooner or later move to Citrix XenServer.
A first sign of it was visible during the VMworld Europe 2009 keynote in February, when Paul Maritz invited the Terremark EMEA CTO on stage to show their early implementation of the VMware vCloud initiative.

Terremark is a public company and the announcement made on May 26 gave its stock a small nice boost:

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Release: VMware vSphere 4.0

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As announced in late April (see the virtualization.info coverage) VMware made available its new vSphere 4.0 (aka ESX 4.0 and vCenter 4.0) in late May.
And as already detailed in a previous post, the rest of the company portfolio doesn’t support the platform at the moemtn.

To fill the gap VMware has to release updates for almost every product. Converter is the first one, introducing support for vSphere with its version 4.0.1 (build 161434).
It may take longer time for the others: for example View has been just upgraded to version 3.1 but it doesn’t see vSphere yet.

VMware is also working to update the training and certification paths: Mike Laverick reports on his blog the official announcement sent to all the VACTs:

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Microsoft announces Hyper-V 2.0 Release Candidate and its additional features

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The release of Hyper-V 2.0 (aka Windows Server 2008 R2 with Hyper-V) and Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 is approaching.
The Release Candidate build is available since almost a month now, and Microsoft may release both platforms before 2010 as originally announced.

As the hypervisor hits the RC, the company unveils additional details about it.
In Q4 2008 we discovered the existence of a virtual machine live migration feature, along with the virtual disks hot plug capability and the support for nested page tables (NPT), TCP/IP Offload Engines (TOEs) and Jumbo Frames.
Now we know that Hyper-V 2.0 will support up to 64 logical processors on the host (8 CPUs each featuring 8 cores) and the so called Processor Compatibility Mode.

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Xen hits version 3.4, supports Hyper-V out-of-the-box

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The open source Xen hypervisor reaches version 3.4 after almost one year of development.

This is an important milestone for the project because of the key features introduced:

  • Xen Client Initiative (XCI) Enhancements
    Xen 3.4 contains the initial XCI code release providing a base client hypervisor for the community to extend and improve.
    Simon Crosby, CTO of Virtualization and Management division at Citrix, adds a pretty interesting detail to this point:
    For the first time the Xen project is moving away from providing simply the hypervisor, and leaving it to vendors/users/developers to build their own system.  This release contains the whole enchilada, including Dom0, the management tool stack and Xen.  In other words, everything you need to be up and running with a Xen client system.
  • Reliability – Availability – Serviceability (RAS)
    Xen 3.4 delivers a collection of features designed to avoid and detect system failures, provide maximum uptime by isolating system faults, and provide system failure notices to administrators to properly service the hardware/software. The combination of these services provide for a robust Xen hypervisor with fault-tolerant and back-up capabilities built-in.
  • Power Management
    Xen 3.4 improves the power saving features with a host of new algorithms to better manage the processor including schedulers and timers optimized for peak power savings.
  • Support for the Hyper-V enlightenment interface

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Release: Quest/Vizioncore vControl 1.0

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In early March, the Quest subsidiary Vizioncore finally unveiled its plans to move beyond VMware, launching a management solution that supports multiple hypervisors and applies to them a sophisticated automation layer.

That plan became an actual product in at the beginning of May with the launch of vControl 1.6.

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At its first public release, the product features many typical capabilities you’d expect in a platform management tool:

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