The updated vRealize cloud management suite lets users move workloads to wherever they're cheapest – Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, or on-premises VMware-based private cloud.

Mitch Wagner, Executive Editor, Light Reading

June 6, 2017

3 Min Read
VMware Lets You Fiddle With Your Hybrid Cloud to Cut Costs

VMware on Tuesday introduced an update to its vRealize cloud management platform to let users move workloads on the fly to wherever they're least expensive, with support for Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and on-premises VMware-based private cloud.

Other new capabilities for the vRealize platform include tools to automate workload placement based on performance, monitor virtual storage area networks (vSANs), and provide security and network management. The platform is designed to integrate cloud servers, networking, storage and security, not treat them separately.

"I like to see that VMware is now aggressively pursuing a cloud differentiation strategy rooted in their core strength of virtualizing servers, network, compute and security," Torsten Volk, managing research director for Enterprise Management Associates, tells Enterprise Cloud News.

The cost-cutting vRealize Business for Cloud 7.3 was most intriguing.

Darren Orzechowski, target="new">VMware Inc. senior director of marketing for cloud management, tells Enterprise Cloud News, "At the same time operations teams are managing from an operational perspective, the teams can look and see where the most cost-efficient place is to put workloads."

Figure 1:

While other vendors provide costing tools for cloud, they are focused on public cloud, while VMware also takes on-premises infrastructure into account, Mahesh Kumar, VMware senior director of product marketing, says. On-premises infrastructure is necessary to get a complete cost picture. "Unless you are a small startup in Silicon Valley, you have a decent data center footprint as well as a cloud footprint, Kumar says.

Existing tools are ineffective at calculating on-premises data center costs for specific applications, "and that's a significant pain point for VMware, as much as for customers," Volk says.

Enterprises move many app workloads to AWS and Azure because of "false calculations" of infrastructure costs, he says. The costing tool will help VMware prevent "drainage to the public cloud."

The VMware vRealize Suite gets several other new elements.

vRealize Operations 6.6 automates workload balancing across clusters and data stores based on business needs, including the ability to schedule rebalancing in a maintenance window, as well as predict anomalies before problems come up.

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VMware Operations 6.6 provides vSAN management and monitoring.

And vRealize Network Insight 3.4 adds support for AWS for cross-cloud security and network management.

Additionally, the suite offers enhancements to container management and configuration management.

However, ease of deployment is a problem with VMware products, and VMware needs to continue work on consolidating cloud tools, Volk says. "I'd expect to see major progression the next version.

— Mitch Wagner Follow me on Twitter Visit my LinkedIn profile Visit my blog Friend me on Facebook Editor, Enterprise Cloud News

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About the Author(s)

Mitch Wagner

Executive Editor, Light Reading

San Diego-based Mitch Wagner is many things. As well as being "our guy" on the West Coast (of the US, not Scotland, or anywhere else with indifferent meteorological conditions), he's a husband (to his wife), dissatisfied Democrat, American (so he could be President some day), nonobservant Jew, and science fiction fan. Not necessarily in that order.

He's also one half of a special duo, along with Minnie, who is the co-habitor of the West Coast Bureau and Light Reading's primary chewer of sticks, though she is not the only one on the team who regularly munches on bark.

Wagner, whose previous positions include Editor-in-Chief at Internet Evolution and Executive Editor at InformationWeek, will be responsible for tracking and reporting on developments in Silicon Valley and other US West Coast hotspots of communications technology innovation.

Beats: Software-defined networking (SDN), network functions virtualization (NFV), IP networking, and colored foods (such as 'green rice').

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