VMware, Cisco Plan Data Center OS 83
Lucas123 writes "John Webster over at Computerworld says VMware and Cisco plan to develop a Data Center OS that would consist of a data center cloud populated by servers, storage, and Cisco's 'intelligent' networking gear, all managed by Cisco and its partners — starting with VMware."
Imagine... (Score:1, Funny)
Can someone explain how... (Score:1)
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This is a Cisco product we are talking about here, right?
OpenVMS & Nonstop Himalaya (Score:2)
When I first read this article, my immediate thought was that if they needed a mission critical kernel and/or mission critical hardware infrastructure to power the thing, then they could probably purchase OpenVMS and/or Nonstop Himalaya for pennies on the dollar.
Or go ahead and purchase QNX from Harman-Kardon.
And it all starts with... (Score:1, Troll)
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Its more complicated than that for sure, and every description I've read of how ESX works makes me more suspicious of what VMware does. In particular their use of Linux drivers, which are and always have been GPL licensed, so either they are using the Linux kernel to ru
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Confused. (Score:4, Interesting)
Is this implementation going to set up virtual servers aligned as a data center, for which virtual computers can access? Or is this an idea for a completely custom virtualization-based operating system that offloads one huge datacenter onto single computers?
If either is the case, how is that any different than either setting up a test server (or servers) with VMware computers all connected to each other using physical connections, or just having multiple VMware sessions on one computer all interconnected using a single connection?
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If either is the case, how is that any different than either setting up a test server (or servers) with VMware computers all connected to each other using physical connections, or just having multiple VMware sessions on one computer all interconnected using a single connection?
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Guess what.. hiring more staff costs more, and more importantly, takes far more time than purchasing VMWare, the commercial Xen thing, or any other commercial virtualization and management platforms.
And you know what? it's not about the core virt tech... that's free. It's about the management tools.
You are probably thinking, sure, why pay them to run a few real boxes with a few dozen virtual boxes. and right you are.
But what about
Re:Confused. (Score:5, Interesting)
Essentially I imagine it will be similar to the way a mainframe acts... a large number of resources, all controlled by a single OS. But instead of a single manufacturer implementation, this will be a proprietary "standard" that allows 3rd party components to be added to the cloud and become available to the "OS"
It's actually a great idea... it's the next evolution from virtualization... Why should a data center admin need to ever concern themselves with the individual servers and storage devices... instead they just add another processor (server), storage device (NAS array), or external network, and the OS will utilize it as it chooses.
I'd imagine that if it is properly executed, it will greatly improve utilization and make managing the data center infinitely easier as all you do is plug the device in and it is automatically assimilated into the system.
All I hope is that they make it a true industry standard, it would suck if only a combination of Cisco, Dell, and EMC devices (for example) would work with the new "OS".
Re:Confused. (Score:4, Interesting)
In essence they get to the same place but ours is more limited and geared towards a particular class of application running on the LAMP stack. Also the problems we were trying to solve when building it was not utilization but scaling, availability and performance. We are actually kind of wasteful of hardware currently but as we grow we get more and more efficient. Economies of scale thing.
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Because I'm sure a lot of people here on
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They don't seem to be able to deal with normal web traffic for selling things.
Colorado Rockies Suspend World Series Ticket Sales because Monfort Brothers want to make sure Denver looks like a cow-town -- Assistance was gladly provided by California based web server farm morons who haven't heard of load-balancing or using something other than JSP on their smokin' Pentium III machines [mlb.com]
They apparently don't realize
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*BOS - Borg OS.
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The part that isn't so great about it is the "proprietary" part. I guess it depends on the implementation and how open the "standard" is. But having worked in IT for several years now, I've become increasingly convinced that closed standards and proprietary systems just aren't acceptable. What inevitably happens is that this terrific idea and great
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The closest parallel I can draw is that of a Fiber Channel SAN... any machine that is physically/logically connected to that SAN can access the storage as though it is local to that machine.
Imagine a protocol, implemented purely in hardware, that allowed distributed processing,
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The oldest being "single system image" clusters. DEC/Compaq/HP had an SSI project for Linux a while back, see openssi.org [openssi.org].
There's also a number of platforms such as 3Tera's AppLogic [3tera.com] that abstracts away the invididual servers using virtualization. AppLogic looks fantastic in many respects - you get a nice GUI to connect together "components" to applications that can span hundreds of CPU's, and you can then deploy applications on
Log file from the datacenter. (Score:2)
All jobs at work station WKS010B ended.
All jobs at work station WKS041A ended.
All jobs at work station GIBSON ended.
The call to *LIBL/QCMDEXC ended in error (C G D F).
Reply . . : C
All jobs at work station CONSOLE ended.
All jobs at work station WKS009A ended.
All jobs at work station WKS010A ended.
All jobs at work station WKS014A ended.
Device DSP03 no longer communicating.
Device DSP03 no longer communicating.
WE ARE THE BORG, YOU WILL BE ASSIMILATED
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Take the above piece of hardware and add a FWSM (Firewall Servi
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I'm both impressed and saddened at the reinvention of this wheel.
Where this will end up.. (Score:2, Insightful)
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> "Game houses wet dream. Thin clients, Oracles wet dream."
"virtual clients"? (Score:2)
Are we to stream video from a server somewhere that has a beefy video card?
Because if so, that's the dumbest idea I've heard in awhile, though it may make cheating harder.
If not, I don't see what you mean by a "virtual client" or what it has to do with this concept.
License costs? (Score:4, Interesting)
I know the architecture I want. Just can't justify it... Xen might.
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Amazon S3? (Score:2)
But it's more like a collection of virtual machines, and a collection of servers. You buy the virtual machines, they figure out where to put em -- but nowhere near as flexible as a real cluster would be.
They missed ... (Score:1)
CC.
Cisco's VFrame is a mess and basically vaporware.. (Score:2)
check out
http://www.xsigo.com/ [xsigo.com]
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How will this be cheaper? (Score:1, Flamebait)
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It's Buzz-word-licious! (Score:4, Interesting)
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HW => OS => BEA => JVM => your code
With virtualization, it looks like this:
HW => ESX => OS => BEA => JVM => your code
They essentially wrote their own OS, so now it looks like this:
HW => ESX => BEA OS => JVM => your code
The ironic thing is that BEA called their OS "Bare Metal", but it is only capably of running as a guest in a VM (i.e. it can't actually run on bare metal). Since it only runs in a VM, it doesn't have to concern
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OMG it's a cluster!!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
What am I missing, please? Apart from buzzwords like "cluster computing" and "intelligent gear".
Why not... (Score:3, Interesting)
A vm on every desktop for serving stuff, with some management glue to make it look like the vm is running on a server in a rack?
Is it not time for that yet?
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A vm on every desktop for serving stuff, with some management glue to make it look like the vm is running on a server in a rack?
Is it not time for that yet?
I have liked this idea for years. Its like the Seti@home project for under used desktops. Very few professions use a significant part of the CPU of the computer sitting on a desk, and those that do, probably do so only occasionally.
However, while simple in concept I suspect it would still be hard to implement.
Hard to implement (Score:2)
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No, i'ts not time. We don't care, and the resource utilization is too hard to manage and marginal.
Our main problem isn't computing resources, it's configuration management. Servers are cheap.. but we have a lot of servers sitting around 98% idle because we don't want to mix applications on the same server. We get held up launching a new application because we don't really want to keep buying new dedicated hardware for each project.
VM tech lets us cleanly separate resour
Why I don't run SETI: (Score:2)
But, desktops? Hell no. Aside from reliability issues -- figuring out which ones are on and available, and where to route a request -- there's security -- just who's computer gets to process your credit card information? What if it's not m
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Have SSH port forwarding, will remote in.
Xen (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm looking forward to a return to big iron or something like it. The quality of hardware, and the amount of thought that went into the operating system, software and configuration, was much higher. Big Iron is like the aristocracy of computing.
An interesting article from last year on this topic
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,2004075,00.asp [eweek.com]
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can't we do this for the human brain already?!? (Score:1)
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Looking forward to the Cert Test! (Score:5, Interesting)
Cisco makes mad, crazy money from certification tests. It's a way they can squeeze another dime from both out-of-work and desperate tech workers as well as companies confused as to exactly what their CIO bought when he went to play golf and came home with the Cisco polo shirt (and, oh, yeah, some contract or something. My name is going to be in Business week, and I got a shirt!)
Money all around, and all they need to do is pretend the advances in modern GUIs, scripting tool, shells and command line utilities the rest of the industry uses don't exist.
Now they want to take this esoteric-for-esoteric's-sake aesthetic across the entire enterprise! On the one hand, having that certification will mean a huge pay jump, as no-one will be able to design, deploy or maintain the sumbitch... I won't either, but I'll be making lots of money calling in Cisco consultants to do my job for me. I might get them to bring me a polo shirt. On the other, you will never be able to bring into the server room a new technology that Cisco/VMWare doesn't want in the server room, regardless of whether or not it's the right thing for your organization. It's like Bad Old IBM all over again if this thing gets any traction.
On Cisco Hardware? Yikes! (Score:1)
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You probably should have just killed her, removed her head and placed it on a pike in front of Cisco's main office. Oh, I'm sure it would have little effect on Cisco's support policies
Data Center OS has detected a license violitation (Score:3, Insightful)
Cisco might still be able to get away with having proprietary networking gear, but there is no way most organizations will move to proprietary for entire data centers.
Plan9 (Score:1)
http://plan9.bell-labs.com/plan9/ [bell-labs.com]
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In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
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Here's a question for ... (Score:2)
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but... (Score:1)
More, better, faster (Score:1)