VMware moved its vision of a software-defined data center a
giant step forward by announcing the pending acquisition of
DynamicOps, a multi-hypervisor management firm that was spun out of
Credit Swisse investment bank.
VMware is fully committed to generated VMware-based public cloud
services through partners such as Bluelock, Verizon Terremark,
CenturyLink Savvis, Colt, SoftBank, and Singtel. But the DynamicOps
move reflects VMware's realization that it will never be a uniform
ESX Server world beyond the enterprise data center. DynamicOps
brings VMware a service governor that can manage Microsoft Hyper-V,
Citrix, and Oracle Xen-based hypervisors and Amazon Web Services'
proprietary version of Xen, Amazon Machine Images.
VMware started out planning to manage the virtualized portion of
the data center through its vSphere and vCenter virtual machine
management software. With DynamicOps added to the fold, it will be
able to manage other suppliers' virtual machines as well, adding
them to the on-premises, private cloud and extending its reach to
workloads in the public cloud as well.
"DynamicOps dovetails really well with our 'IT-as-a-service'
strategy," said Ramin Sayar, VP and general manager of cloud
infrastructure and management at VMware. VMware CTO Steve Herrod
described IT-as-a-service as springing out of a software-defined
data center, where virtual machines are created and moved around as
needed for most efficient operation. Instead of just managing
virtual machines created under ESX Server, it will be able to add
two other major hypervisors as well.
No purchase price was disclosed. DynamicOps has received USD
16.3 million in venture capital backing since emerging in 2008 from
a software group at Credit Swisse that had sought to install a
management console over the several types of virtual machines the
firm was running.
Part of DynamicOps' early success was to enter into an agreement
with Dell to provide management components for Dell's Virtual
Integrated System (VIS), a multi-hypervisor approach to managing
clusters of Dell hardware. According to VMware's Sayar, not only
will that agreement remain in place, but VMware will gain early
integration of DynamicOps with its own product line because
DynamicOps and VMware's vCloud Director have already been
integrated to work together on Dell VIS.
DynamicOps is also "very synergistic" with another key VMware
product, vCenter Operations, which brings configuration,
performance management, and capacity management to virtual machine
operations. VCenter Operations maintains information about each VM
that is useful in a management console like DynamicOps.
If VMware is able to collect information about each virtual
machine as it is formed and understands what share of a given task
that virtual machine can perform, it will prove useful information
to a system that is trying to manage a variety of hypervisors at
the same time or manage workloads in both private and public
clouds.
The software vendor that knows how to use information derived
from the configuration of different brands of virtual machines--and
can manage their performance--has taken a giant step toward
becoming the pivot point of the software-defined data center, as
described by VMware CTO Herrod. When capacity is needed, it will be
able to spin up additional virtual machines that are added
seamlessly to the cluster, according to preset policies. When
traffic wanes, it will decommission virtual machines and
consolidate those remaining on fewer physical hosts, according to
preset policies.
DynamicOps uses a model-driven approach that allows self-service
provisioning and governance policies that apply to ESX Server
virtual machines to be extended to competing hypervisors' virtual
machines. Likewise, policies built out to govern cloud
infrastructure built with VMware's vCloud Director can be extended
into other cloud settings, said Sayar.
While different clouds have different self-provisioning
procedures, DynamicOps' modeling can pull them together into "a
single cloud storefront across heterogeneous infrastructure pools,"
said Sayar.
DynamicOps was initially funded by Credit Swisse's internal
venture capital arm. It was later supported with USD 5.5 million
from Intel Capital and USD 11 million from Sierra Ventures and Next
World Capital.
Source:
InformationWeek USA