CA Technologies is changing more than just its name as it
extends its systems management reach into the cloud. The newly
renamed CA Technologies signaled to its extensive user group that
it is executing its plan to extend systems management products into
the cloud Monday.
On the second day of its 7,000-attendee CA World 2010 conference
in Las Vegas, it announced four products in the Cloud-Connected
Management Suite to help a traditional enterprise "bridge the gap"
between data center operations and the public cloud. In doing so,
it attempted to reposition the software firm formerly known as just
CA. It wants to be a more forward-looking company, helping
customers gain access to the next generation of business
computing.
"We're basically buying technology on the other side of the
bridge," then restructuring it to connect to the enterprise data
center, said CA Executive VP Chris O'Malley, as he walked from a
Monday morning keynote address through the sprawling Mandalay Bay
convention center to his appearance at a press conference. He is
head of CA cloud products and the former chief of CA's mainframe
product line. "We believe the cloud is going to change the meaning
of IT," he added at another point in the interview.
CA's recent acquisitions have included 3Tera, NetQOS, Cassatt,
Oblicore and Nimsoft, all of which could be described as companies
producing software for cloud computing. Nimsoft, for example, is
widely used as a virtualized server management tool by managed
service providers because it is designed to see into and report on
a multi-tenant server, instead of a server running one or two
applications.
As a result of the acquisitions, it will produce two new cloud
management products later this year and two in the second and third
quarters of 2011, O'Malley said. CA Cloud Insight will provide
customers who are cloud users with a yardstick for measuring
existing cloud providers and their services against the business
goals of the organization. In six months, CA Technologies is
planning on leveraging a new set of cloud definitions and metrics
that will be established by the Service Management Index, a
creation of Carnegie Mellon University's Silicon Valley campus, and
an industry consortium of backers, including CA. The metrics will
be used to determine quality and performance of cloud services,
according to a vendor neutral standard.
O'Malley said shoppers for cloud services will be able to pull
performance statistics for difference services in the Cloud Insight
product and compare and contrast services. If users favor one
metric over another for their business, say security, they can
weight it more heavily in the index, then view their prospects
through that filter. If they value speed of virtual server
response, or consistency of availability, they can view services
through those filters.
"We believe cloud services are going down the path of
manufacturing's supply chain," he noted. In effect there will be an
IT supply chain of cloud services and "customers will need to
understand the services available," he said.
CA Cloud Insight product Cloud Insight will first become generally
available in October, said David Hodgson, senior VP and head of
engineering on the cloud product line.
A second product, also to become generally available in October,
is CA Cloud Compose. It will provide a catalogue of reusable
software components for composite applications. It will be derived
from the 3Tera acquisition, which included AppLogic, a product that
can take an application and package it as a virtual machine
targeted for a particular cloud environment. CA intends to make
Cloud Compose, and the AppLogic product itself, a cross-hypervisor
system that could produce cloud workloads for clouds that run
Citrix Systems' XenServer, VMware's ESX Server, Microsoft's Hyper-V
and perhaps other hypervisors. Cloud Compose will include both
composite application creation and deployment capabilities,
O'Malley said.
CA Cloud Optimize in will be generally available April 2011. In
addition to the metrics supplied by the Service Management Index,
Cloud Optimize will also draw on a new community that CA launched
Monday, the CloudCommons.com, where any cloud customer may share an
experience in what worked or didn't work for them with a cloud
technology or vendor. After six months of the CloudCommons
collecting data, the new Cloud Optimize product will start farming
that data for information. By combining the service index with
CloudCommons data, Cloud Optimize users are expected to be able to
figure out what combinations of services and service providers suit
them best, and provide them with the best cost structure, O'Malley
said.
The fourth product in the new Cloud Management Suite is CA Cloud
Orchestrate, due out by third quarter of 2011. Cloud Orchestrate
will provide workflow control and policy-based automation of
changes in service infrastructure, as dictated by feedback gathered
by Cloud Insight, Cloud Compose and Cloud Optimize. Users will
pursue efficiencies and incremental gains in the cloud by adjusting
their operations to the best practices indicated by the reported
statistics. Cloud Orchestrate will be built on technologies gained
from the acquisitions of 3Tera, Oblicore and Cassatt, O'Malley
said.