VMware vSphere updated in big cloud play
By Tom Brewster,
VMware has looked to solidify its place as the number one virtual machine player with a plethora of updates to its vSphere virtualisation management range of products.
Chief executive (CEO) Paul Maritz said VMware was hoping to make businesses’ physical infrastructure “disappear,” with what it believes is the industry’s first Cloud Infrastructure Suite.
Hypervisor vSphere 5 is included within that suite alongside four other VMware products: vCenter SRM for business continuity needs, vCenter Operations for monitoring of virtual machines, vShield for security, and vCloud Director for policy and reporting.
The suite is expected to be available in the third quarter of this year.
Fresh features
VMware claimed vSphere 5 would be four times more powerful than previous versions, able to process more than one million I/O operations per second.
Chief technical officer (CTO) Stephen Herrod said vSphere 5 had been dubbed the “monster VM,” due to its ability to support a VM with up to 1TB of memory and 32 virtual CPUs.
One notable addition is the replication in software in vCenter Site Recovery Manager 5, allowing companies without storage replication to duplicate their environments for their recovery needs.
When quizzed why companies would want this feature, VMware said that particular feature would appeal more to small and medium-sized businesses who would not enjoy such replication functions.
The latest version of vCloud Director has been given “linked clone capabilities” to reduce provisioning time to as little as five seconds and cutting storage requirements by as much as 60 per cent, according to VMware. Linked clones are copies of an original virtual machine.
In a separate announcement, VMware launched its vSphere Storage Appliance, aimed at the SMB market.
The appliance lets users create a single pool of storage across multiple servers containing direct attached storage, up to a limit of three hosts, our sister site Cloud Pro reported.
Licensing shift
VMware has also altered its licensing arrangements for vSphere. Users will now pay for the amount of pooled virtual memory they use, rather than per CPU or per core. Pooled vRAM is the total amount of memory configured to all VMs in a customer infrastructure.
This altered licensing structure will "lay the foundation for customers to adopt a more cloud-like IT cost model based on consumption and value rather than physical components and capacity," VMware said.
Rival Citrix made a big announcement yesterday, with the acquisition of Cloud.com.
For further coverage of cloud computing visit our sister site Cloud Pro.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Cloud Analysis & Insight
Windows Azure VM Beta for AWS users (and cloud virgins)
Steve’s been playing with the Windows Azure beta. But what does he think? Read on to find out.
- Citrix takes on the mobile cloud at Synergy
- Getting ready for EMC World
- Montreux Jazz Festival: Storage in a different light
- IBM Impact 2012: Scott Hebner, IBM
- Google, and that 5GB free storage
- Q&A: Carter George executive director of Dell storage
- Enterprises must find secure Dropbox for employees
- IBM Pulse 2012: Q&A, Angel Diaz, software standards vice president
- Top 10 tips to get the most out of Dropbox
Latest Cloud Reviews
CA ARCserve Backup r16
Rating: ![]()
- Egnyte HybridCloud review
- Dell PowerEdge C6100 review
- Iomega StorCenter px6-300d review
- Head to Head: Google Apps vs Microsoft Office 365
- QNap TS-559 Pro II TurboNAS review
- ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- Samsung Chromebook Series 5 review
- Iomega StorCenter px4-300r review
- Websense Triton Security Gateway Anywhere review
advertisement
Most popular
- UK regulator shuts down Angry Birds scam
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- HP plans massive job cuts
- EMC World 2012: Tucci declares Documentum is here to stay
- Dell EqualLogic PS6100XS review
- Macs and Android under malware threat
- RIM loses its head of sales
- Local fibre broadband needs common standards
Latest News Videos in Cloud
IT PRO Podcast: CES 2011
In the first podcast of 2011, we talk with Adam Griffin of Dell and Barry Collins of PCPro about tablets, the cloud and all the other exciting...
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.




