By Jack M. Germain TechNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
09/15/08 6:00 AM PT
Longtime cohorts Tek-Tools and GlassHouse have again collaborated, this time coming up with the new Managed Services for Virtual Environments. The suite enables users to track configurations and manage utilization across large and growing networks of virtualized machines.
GlassHouse Technologies announced on Monday the release
of Managed Services for Virtual Environments, a first-of-its-kind
suite of managed services. The company broke the news at
the VMworld 2008 Solution Exchange in Las Vegas.
GlassHouse, an independent IT infrastructure consulting and services
firm, launched its advanced management interface in conjunction with
virtualization management software from Tek-Tools Software. The
partnership produced a service that provides users with improved
visibility, monitoring and reporting of their virtualized IT
environments.
It enables users to maximize availability, track system configurations
and manage utilization to reduce IT costs, according to the company. Leveraging
and analyzing output through the management interface, GlassHouse
consultants help customers interpret the data and use
capacity and utilization reports to manage their virtual
environments.
"We are the first to do this. We are filling a gap in the market. Over
the past few years we have seen more companies adopt virtualization,"
Mitch Northcutt, senior vice president for GlassHouse Technologies,
told TechNewsWorld.
No Longer One and the Same
This trend is expected to continue, according to research firm IDC, with the virtualization services market predicted to reach US$11.7
billion by 2011. Managed Services for Virtual Environments is intended
to eliminate a barrier to the broader adoption of virtualization
technologies by offering users
deeper insight into the productivity, capacity and return on investment of their
virtual machines, Northcutt said.
GlassHouse has watched companies adopt virtualization strategies in order to reduce costs by cutting back hardware and related
expenses. However, many of these companies have no clear picture of exactly how far along they are in achieving that goal at a given time, or exactly what level of expenses they've managed to cut. The industry lacked a
visible way to show virtualization users the scale of their
expectations and illustrate other management issues related to virtualization,
he said.
"It used to be that the same people who managed the physical
environment did the virtual environment. But they are not the same
thing. Now that we are seeing virtual sprawl, we need a better way to
manage it," Northcutt said.
Need More Than Tools?
Various software firms have produced a range of tools to help
manage virtual environments. However, users often lack any
in-depth knowledge about maximizing the data these tools report.
The partnership of GlassHouse and Tek-Tools is intended to offer virtualization
customers a two-level product.
In customer support gatherings, GlassHouse identified the need for
more in-depth instruction on how to maintain visibility,
measure results and effectively manage the environments. Already
providing these capabilities for storage and backup environments,
GlassHouse developed a management interface integrated with Tek-Tools'
Profiler for VMware (NYSE: VMW) to provide a single-pane view into the virtual
environment and a comprehensive service to manage virtualized IT
assets.
Level One
The first part of the GlassHouse tool package is the monitoring and
reporting service. It gives IT managers data analysis the can inform their decisions when managing the virtual environment.
GlassHouse built a single-pane view on top of the Tek-Tools
virtualization management software. Tek-Tools will continue to sell
its Profiler management software. GlassHouse modified this tool to
work with its own platform.
"Our device sits on their environment to watch over it
and report trouble," said Northcutt.
Level Two
The second phase of GlassHouse's new service is a "fully managed system looks at the newer and different virtualization features," Ron Oglesby,
director of architecture for virtualization services at GlassHouse,
told TechNewsWorld. "It addresses the concerns of enterprise
managers about is the host system at optimum efficiency."
For example, the number of patches issued by various software makers is constantly growing -- current
statistics show patches are being issued on a monthly basis instead of
quarterly, he explained.
The result is a soup-to-nuts approach to running virtualization hosts.
GlassHouse will provide the tools to manage cost models and add all
the things missing from a standard X86 environment, said Oglesby.
Pricing and Availability
Managed Services for Virtual Environments will be available beginning
next week, Oglesby said. GlassHouse is currently working with
customers utilizing the management interface and is expanding
functionality through other partners.
The pricing structure is not yet finalized, but it will likely be
based on the number of hosts. Oglesby expected the final pricing formula to group pricing levels on
one to three hosts, four to 10 hosts, and 10 or more hosts.
Desperately Seeking Enterprise Software for Macs September 11, 2008
Macs have long been kept out of the enterprise due to a vicious cycle: Companies didn't use them because the software they needed wasn't compatible, and software vendors didn't develop compatible wares because few companies used Macs. That's changing now, with the emergence of virtualization tech, Web-based apps and software synchronization tools.
Related Stories
Microsoft Makes Major Move in Virtualization Catch-Up Game September 08, 2008
Microsoft rolled out several products -- in various stages of readiness -- that bring it closer to being able to compete with Citrix and VMware in the virtualization game. Among the products it introduced were System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008 and Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008.
HP's Virtualization Honcho John Bennett: Rethinking Virtualization September 04, 2008
Following a series of announcements by HP on the virtualization front, contributor Dana Gardner of Interarbor Solutions interviewed HP's virtualization visionary, Don Bennett. The pair spoke about how virtualization is making inroads into data centers worldwide.
More by Jack M. Germain
Yahoo Lets FOSS Community Drive Its Traffic Server November 04, 2009
Yahoo Traffic Server is an app server for builders of cloud services. The software package enables session management, authentication, configuration management, load balancing and routing for an entire cloud computing stack. Yahoo has now open sourced a version of the application through Apache.
Is AES Encryption Crackable? November 03, 2009
A team of researchers has discovered what they think could be a flaw that leaves AES encryption open to attack. The technique has only been shown in a theoretical setting; in practice, such a hack would be very difficult to pull off. Still, such a finding could bring into question the faith that's been placed in AES -- and spur new innovation to make encryption even better.
Windows 7 Is a Snooze October 29, 2009
It's accurate to say that Windows 7 straightens out some of the problems with Vista. Aside from that, though, there aren't a whole lot of standout reasons to upgrade to the new OS, especially if you're currently on XP or you honestly don't mind Vista. The new features that are present aren't quite worth the trouble to learn how to use, and if you happen to have even slightly old equipment, forget about it.