Plus d’évolution de VMware Lab Manager

VMware l’a annoncé le 14 février, il n’y aura plus de mise à jour majeure de VMware Lab Manager.

Le support sera assuré jusqu’au 1er mai 2013

We want to provide you with an important update about the vCenter Lab Manager product.  As customers continue to expand the use of virtualization both inside the datacenter and outside the firewall, we are focusing on delivering infrastructure solutions that can support these expanded scalability and security requirements.  As a result of this focus, we have decided to discontinue additional major releases of vCenter Lab Manager.  Lab Manager 4 will continue to be supported in line with our General Support Policy through May 1st, 2013.

As VMware continues to invest in our customers’ journey to cloud computing, we are focusing on delivering secure multi-tenant enterprise hybrid clouds with VMware vCloud Director.  vCloud Director is a new software solution that provides the scalability and security necessary to deliver catalog-based self-service provisioning across different workload types, across multiple enterprise tenants, and across both private and public deployment models.

As a customer of Lab Manager, we would like to offer you a special opportunity to leverage the scale and security of vCloud Director.  Customers who are active on SnS may exchange their existing licenses of Lab Manager to licenses of vCloud Director at no additional cost.  This exchange program is entirely optional and may be exercised anytime during Lab Manager’s General Support period.  This provides you the freedom and flexibility to decide whether and when to implement a secure enterprise hybrid cloud.

For more information about this product update, visit http://www.vmware.com/go/labmanager-update

La fin des baies CLARiiON et Celerra chez EMC : bienvenue à V-CX

Merci à Olivier pour avoir attiré mon attention sur cette nouvelle de The Register concernant la convergenace des baies CLARiiON et Celerra vers une nouvelle baie (« hybride ») la V-CX.

EMC to converge CLARiiON and Celerra arrays
EMC is about to converge its CLARiiON and Celerra arrays into a new V-CX product, according to a pair of sources with knowledge of the situation.
This will be presented as virtualised unified storage with new levels of VMware integration, the sources say.
The product will apparently come with iSCSI and FCoE block access and possibly physical Fibre Channel too. File access will be through the usual suspects: NFS and CIFS.
CLARiiON CX4 users will have a transition path to the V-CX. The separate Celerra product line will remain available but its longer term direction is one of disappearance into the V-CX product set and end-of-life as a separate product. The need for Celerra to remain available is possibly there because full Celerra functionality won’t be in the V-CX on day one, being deliverable in later releases.
The V-CX will have a VMware code underpinning, and it will run the CLARiiON’s FLARE operating system as well as the Celerra’s DART O/S. There will be one or more controllers in a V-CX array with N+1 failover between them. These controllers will be clustered.
Sources are also saying that V-CX arrays can be configured for N+1 failover between them. The arrays will be clusterable and federated, through V-Plex
A V-CX array will come with both hard disk drives (HDD) and solid state drives (SSD). It can grow performance by having controllers added and grow capacity by adding either or both HDDs and SSDs. Such scaling can be done on demand. Upgrading a V-CX with drive shelves, controllers, the O/S software and firmware is claimed to be transparent.
The announcement timetable, the one we have seen, looks quite aggressive. There may be some kind of early or pre-announcement in the week after Easter. EMC World takes place in the USA in May and more might be said about it there. The first general availability would be in June, possibly even May, with fuller featured availability three months later in the fourth quarter, possibly October.
Stifel Niklaus analyst Aaron Rakers says he is expecting the CLARiiON refresh to take place in the third quarter or early second half. This would be about two years since the CX4 model was introduced.
Converging CLARiiON and Celerra is an interesting tactic in that EMC is arriving at the place where NetApp exists now. NetApp started with filers and added SAN access to them, creating its unified FAS storage arrays running Data ONTAP. Now EMC is taking its block access CLARiiON array technology and adding in the Celerra filer/iSCSI functionality to create its own single unified storage line.
We can also see a similarity here with HP’s expected direction of having multiple array personalities on a single basic storage hardware set, such as EVA, LeftHand, and Ibrix.
There is another piece to this puzzle in that EMC is developing a UbFS file system, one that will underpin both block and file access to its storage arrays. UbFS is a provisional name and it is a follow-on from Celerra’s UxFS file system. We’re hearing that UbFS has a 758KB chunk size, the same as the sub-LUN size in FAST 2. This filesystem is said to be a prerequisite for FAST2, EMC’s automated data moving software from array tiering.
A V-CX would fit nicely, in EMC product naming terms, alongside the Symmetrix V-Max and the coming V-Plex array federalising box. Everything is coming up virtual.
One piece of uncertainty is that we haven’t found any reference to an EMC V-CX trademark, which we did with V-Plex. So the drum messages could be virtual hogwash.
EMC declined to comment.

Comment ne pas se réconforter d’avoir fait le choix Pillar Data Systems il y a de cela moins de 6 mois concernant l’extension de notre stockage.

Néanmoins cette nouvelle n’a rien de surprenant quand on étudie les concurrents plus ou moins direct d’EMC (NetAPP, Pillar, …) qui propose pour une même baie et du SAN et du NAS.

Il est a noté l’apparition du FCoE dans l’ex-gamme CLARiiON.

Cette partie de l’article me laisse perplexe attendons de voir l’annonce officielle d’EMC :

The V-CX will have a VMware code underpinning, and it will run the CLARiiON’s FLARE operating system as well as the Celerra’s DART O/S.

Enfin la réponse à une question …

… avec l’arrivée de l’API vStorage dans vSphere beaucoup se sont interrogés sur la pérennité de VMware Consolided Backup plus connu sous le sigle VCB.

VMware annonce enfin officiellement la couleur à travers un email de « fin de disponibilité »

Dear Valued Customer,

The purpose of this letter is to inform you of our vSphere backup product strategy, ongoing enhancements, and end of availability plans for VMware Consolidated Backup.

VMware Backup Product Strategy
VMware released vStorage APIs for Data Protection (VADP) with the vSphere 4.0 release in May, 2009. VADP is the next generation of VMware’s backup framework. We have also been working with several backup partners to integrate VADP into their solutions to make backup of vSphere Virtual Machines fast, efficient and easy to deploy compared to VCB and other backup solutions. Several of our major backup partners have already released VADP integrated backup products and we expect most of the major backup partners to have VADP integrated backup software by the upcoming feature release of the vSphere platform in 2010.

Future Product Licensing
Given the strong interest and adoption of VADP by our backup eco-system and the benefits offered by VADP compared to VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB), we are announcing the End of Availability for VCB starting with next vSphere feature release in 2010. Starting with the next vSphere platform feature release, VCB will be removed from vSphere platform. VADP integrated backup products (including VMware Data Recovery) will be the recommended option for efficient backup and restoration of vSphere Virtual Machines. This will allow us to focus new value added feature development on VADP instead of two backup frameworks (VCB and VADP). You can find more information about the use of vStorage APIs for Data Protection in our Developer Community. For information on the availability of VADP integrated release of your backup product please contact your backup vendor.

End of Availability
With the release of the next vSphere platform, we will continue to provide the binaries for VCB, but they will not be compatible with the next platform release. We will continue to provide support for VCB on the current vSphere platform per the VMware support policy.

If you need assistance in the migration from VMware Consolidated Backup to the vStorage APIs for Data Protection, please contact your local reseller or storage backup vendor.

Best regards,
VMware Product Management

Les choses ont au moins le mérite d’être claires maintenant …