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VMware fleshes out cloud security strategy

VMware fleshes out cloud security strategy

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 24 Feb 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

The company’s Virtual Datacentre Operating System will include vShield to help define different security policies for different systems. Info-Tech’s John Sloan offers his take on the vCloud initiative

“VMware is really serious about pushing internal virtualized utility infrastructures, rebranding that as a private or internal cloud, and then federating that with external cloud providers,” said John Sloan, senior research analyst for the London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group.

“You can have a workload hosted on virtual machines internally but be able to move them to an external cloud provider and be able to manage that federation so that there’s interoperability and that sort of thing.”

The vShield plays into concerns over security.

“One concern with workload mobility internally and hosting stuff in an external third party cloud provider, it always raises questions about security,” Sloan said. “This is an attempt to make the security policies move with the virtual server, where typically the security is hard wired into the hardware.”

But Sloan added the concept of virtual management is nothing new.

“Cloud computing is essentially aggregation and abstraction of computing resources managed by an external provider, but there’s so much buzz and hype around cloud computing that a lot of what’s happening at VMworld right now is a rebranding of that concept,” Sloan said. “From now on they’re not going to talk about utility infrastructures or virtual management, they’ll talk about the private cloud, the internal cloud, because they figure that will resonate more with people because of the interest in cloud computing.”

At VMworld Europe, VMware also announced it is adding a high availability feature called vCenter Server Heartbeat to its central management console vCenter.

Heartbeat will provide a fail-over feature to the vCenter server itself. If something happens to the primary management server, a spare copy will take over without any downtime, said Bogomil Balkansky, VMware's senior director of product marketing.

The announcements come a week after Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based Citrix Systems Inc. announced Citrix Essentials, a set of management tools for Microsoft Corp.’s Hyper V, as part of a 20-year partnership between the two vendors.

“Microsoft definitely sees the more advanced management of virtualization especially to the desktop as something that Citrix can play a role in, so I think that sets them up as a very strong competitor to WMware,” Sloan said. “However VMware still has the advantage of market and mind share.”

With files from Mikael Ricknäs, IDG News Service










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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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