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BlueCat launches virtual version of IPAM gear

BlueCat launches virtual version of IPAM gear

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 08 Apr 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Proteus and Adonis products will be available as virtual appliances for VMware ESX. Info-Tech’s Jayanth Angl explains the pros and cons

A Canadian manufacturer is offering IP address management (IPAM) software for VMware Inc.’s ESX hypervisor, which an analyst says is attractive to companies looking to reduce capital spending on network infrastructure.

Toronto-based BlueCat Networks Inc. recently announced its Proteus and Adonis products will now be available as “virtual appliances,” meaning users can download files and create virtual machine instances of them.

“Anything you can do in our physical appliances you can do in our virtual appliances,” said Branko Miskov, BlueCat’s director of product management.

BlueCat’s hardware includes Proteus 5000, which is designed to let administrators manage Domain Name System (DNS) and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) services on the network. The Adonis 250 is a DNS caching appliance while the Adonis 1000 and 1750 support both DNS and DHCP.

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The virtual versions are available for download for a 15 days free evaluation.

“A lot of organizations are moving away from buying a specialized box for each system or each application that you want to run, because you run into a situation where you have 10, 20, or 30 boxes in a data centre all doing their own specific task, and in many cases none of them are actually running to their full capacity,” Miskov said. “You have unused hardware, you have unused CPU, and there’s also the electricity cost, the rack space cost, so being able to consolidate that is a huge boon for customers.”

The products would be attractive for companies that have had their capital budgets cut, because the subscription-based pricing lets companies use their operating budgets for IPAM, said Jayanth Angl, senior research analyst with the London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group.

“The hardware consolidation benefits, helping organizations reduce their overall footprint, that is certainly going to be attractive to many,” Angl said.

But Angl added the hardware version lets administrators separate IP address management (IPAM) from the rest of the server infrastructure.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.
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