Virtualization-oriented architecture takes SOA to the next level

Quoting from InfoWorld:


If we work together to put virtualized storage and infrastructure in sync with the trajectory of virtual systems, we’ll witness the birth of VOA (virtualization-oriented architecture) and the dying of reality as IT knows and despises it.

VOA calls to mind the use of virtualization to make SOAs (service-oriented architectures) more durable, mobile, and versatile.

In a safe, transitional stage that bridges SOA to VOA, virtual systems will fire up, suspend, and relocate to ensure that service requests get the fastest possible response. The first cut of VOA will reduce SOA complexity and lead time by simplifying deployment and operations architecture processes. Systems and storage become a cloud on the design diagram, and a single SOA rollout doesn’t have a discrete bill of materials…

Read the whole article at source.

Parallels to demonstrate support of Intel Virtualization Technology at Intel Developer Forum

Parallels is aggressively marketing out and doesn’t seem afraid at all of upcoming free VMware Server.

They will be present at Intel Developer Forum 2006, usually a good place where virtualization vendors emerge with new releases or annoncements, presenting their implementation of Intel Virtualization Technology (VT) inside Parallels Workstation 2.1, actually in beta phase.

Altiris to offer a Software Virtualization Solution for free

Altiris is seriously entering the virtualization market focusing on applications. They are going to compete against Softricity with a product called Software Virtualization Solution (SVS) 2.0, expected for public release on 23th March.

News.com published the news of a free version for personal use:

…Altiris will focus on what it describes as a service-oriented management concept, encompassing service-oriented architectures (SOAs) as the technology backbone, products that address management processes and a service-based delivery model.

To help its virtualization software gain more traction, Altiris next month will offer a free downloadable tool which users can deploy to change the settings of applications on their PCs according to their personal requirements…

Read the whole article at source.

At the same time InfoWorld published a review of pre-release version giving it 8.8 points:


SVS worked flawlessly during my testing. I was able to record, enable, disable and reset both simple (Office Web Components) and complex (the full Office 2003 Professional suite) installation layers on the fly, with nearly instantaneous results. Each local SVS management function was replicated within the Altiris Console, allowing me to activate, deactivate, and control application layers centrally. That’s a real boon for help desk professionals trying to diagnose installation or runtime errors.

As I put SVS through its paces and enjoyed the ease of managing the software virtualization layers, I couldn?t help but think that Altiris SVS is the kind of paradigm-shifting technology that one normally associates with Operating System evolution at the platform level…

Read the whole article at source.

Thanks to Thincomputing.net for the news.

VMware to host a major event in Singapore

Quoting from ComputerWorld:

VMware, the global provider of virtual infrastructure software for industry-standard systems, will host the first major virtualisation event in Singapore. The VMware Solution Day “Virtualise Now” event will be held on Wednesday, March 8, 2006 at Raffles City Convention Centre.

VMware Solution Day creates a forum for IT and business executives to learn about VMware’s latest virtualisation solutions and features presentations from VMware Solution and Technology Partners on how companies can get comprehensive virtualisation solutions by integrating leading edge solutions…

Read the whole article at source.

VMware opens TSX 2006 to public

Not everybody knows that VMware doens’t organize just the VMworld conference in US.
There is another very important event in EMEA every year, called Technical Solutions Exchange (TSX).

TSX is different from VMworld cause it’s reserved to VMware Certified Professionals (VCP) bringing in very technical advanced sessions. Until today.
This TSX 2006 edition, taking place in Paris on 26-27th April, will be open for every customer and VMware (non-Enterprise) Partners for the first time.

The event will take place in Dysneyland Resort (wow!) and entrance fee will cost $399 for non VMware partners.
Sessions descriptions are not available at this time.

With this move VMware could start morphing TSX in a sort of VMworld for EMEA (just like Microsoft does with TechEd).

This is a good and a bad thing at the same time: is good cause TSX becomes an aggregation event in Europe (and I feel it’s really needed), it’s bad cause VCPs chances to know new/reserved things could be reduced or nulled.

In case I’ll attend the TSX 2006 I’ll write another post, hoping to personally meet every european virtualization.info readers.

The value of VMware VMotion

In an animated thread inside VMTN Forums just appeared a neat witness of how important and how reliable VMware VMotion is.
In my humble opinion it’s worth more than a thousand of case studies.

I quote it integrally:

My Virtual Center console shows 215 VMs provisioned, 806 VMs migrated.
I move live production servers around ALL the time via VMotion and have never had a problem.
And I work at H&R Block, and it’s tax season. Believe me, I DON’T want servers going down this time of the year.

I had a memory module show as degraded the other day. The server didn’t go down, but Insight Manager was telling me to replace it before it failed. I moved all the VMs off in the middle of day and replaced the memory, and then moved them all back.

Beautiful.

This server was hosting 18 VMs. I don’t even want to think about hard it would have been to find a common maintenance window for 18 different servers in order to take them all down at once.
I’m sure I would have had to drive 45 minutes into work at 3:00 am, replace ONE memory module, and then drive 45 minutes back home.
Instead I VMotioned 18 VMs off (2 or 3 to each of my other servers), replaced the memory module, and VMotioned 18 VMs back. While eating my lunch.

The trick is design your capacity to give yourself the ability to recover from a completely failed VMware server or in case of maintenance work like this.