Archive for vExpert

VMworld – Where is the Zephyr?

There where some pretty big announcements and reveals at VMworld 2012, but unless I missed something (which was totally possible had any accouncement been made on Wednesday morning) nothing significant/direct was said of Project Zephyr…VMware’s public cloud offering. What is slightly confusing is that VMware have been very open in the beta for the vCloud Test Drive site (which is based on chargeback) and where offering $50 credit’s for VMworld attendee’s.

So…where is Project Zephyr at?

If you ask anyone inside VMware (and I have tried on many levels) you get a very scripted company line response along the lines of “We don’t comment on rumours”. The most I have been able to get out of anyone is that it’s nothing to worry about for vCloud Service Provider Partners.

While initially I felt a strong sense of…almost betrayal! After all the work VMware have done helping providers compete against other public cloud offerings (see my opening blog post), and always being about the partner cloud ecosystem it felt like a shift in direction overnight…one which is obviously driven by the fact the big boys of Amazon, Azure, Google and to a lesser extend RackSpace have all taken significant chunks of the market space. Obviously Amazon is the biggest, but Azure and Google will start to flex muscle…because of who they are.

With that I do understand VMware’s nervousness in the fact the vCloud ecosystem hasn’t grown as quickly as they would like, but I would argue that the pure public cloud space and where vCloud offerings sit are completely different market verticals and therein lies my ultimate sense of ease with Project Zephyr…if it eventuates. Extendig that to my local market of Australia, we are only now just seeing RackSpace and Amazon show interest in avalabilty zones locally to counter the huge data sovereignty issue that exists in Australia…the big boys aren’t really here yet and hopefully won’t get established for a long time…I also believe that Australian companies, be it a large corporate or an SMB trust and like to do business with local providers of whom there is an existing strong relationship.

I’ve used this line internally a couple of times when dicussing the threats of Office365 or Google Apps…

In our industry, cunsumers don’t by on brand alone, they buy on relationships…if you own a strong customer relationship 9/10 they will go with your offering.

What I would ask of VMware is that, if Zephyr comes to light offset any potential partner unease by extending the provisioning and automatiation tools used for the public platform, by way of releasing a step-by-step framework with all relevent documentation and examples so that vCloud partners can easily provide the same level of functionality to their offerings.

The last point I want to make here is that, for me the public cloud space is the domain of the developer…I’ve seen it locally here where pure consumption based IaaS providers main client base is the developer community…usually VM’s are procured for dev/testing and if applications are hosted off them it’s to burst out, or because they don’t require a significant backend such as MSSQL or Oracal. I only know of a couple major sites (and no major corporation) that hosts with a pure Public Cloud provider.

This is where the vCloud Ecosystem can actually continue to thrive…especially in Australia, by way of ensuring that our platforms are the obvious choice for companies that want maximum flexibiltiy, power and scalability, enhanced support and manageability, but also want to actually engage in partner relationships to maximize the service offerings…vCloud partners can differentiate…public clouds can’t.

vExpert 2012 – My Journey in Virtualization so far…

If you had asked me 2 years ago that I’d be writing as a VMware vExpert I would have thought you were crazy. At that stage my only exposure to VMware was on a co-lo server I was hosting for a mates start-up back in 2008. It was ESXi 3.5 back then and, compared to Hyper-V R2, it seemed fairly run of the mill…a clunky foreign interface to someone who lived in Microsoft MMC’s and all I was dealing with was VM related errors…with no HA!

I’m a Microsoft guy…I am still happy to point that out. My passion in Hosting was born of IIS, MSSQL, MSCRM, Exchange and SharePoint. I also work on Linux based systems for PHP/MySQL hosting, DNS and POP3 mail. Without a decent medium it was near on impossible to get a look in at an MVP award, but I have always been strong in evangelization of the systems I work with day in and day out. A strong advocate of partner hosted services I have always been one to rise up and speak against the public cloud offerings Microsoft (and others) have pushed hard in the vein attempts to play catch-up with Google. Public Cloud offerings such as Office365, have been largely built upon the momentum partners built up over the 2000’s in being able to deliver services such as Hosted Exchange and MSCRM when they were not built for multi-tenancy from the ground up the partner community drove early adoption and made it viable for slogans such as “To the Cloud” (shudder) possible…more to come on this later in the post.

I started out testing in lab environments on old 486/Pentium systems that I could put together from spare parts in the office…while I was able to get some decent labs up, space was always at a premium and performance was limited. From there, I remember getting my hands on Virtual PC from Microsoft and started to load up lab machine on that…I remember it taking a whole day to load up Windows 2003, so the experience was frustrating to say the least…even so, the seed had been sewn. From there Virtual PC 2005 was released and, from a viability point of view, we were in business. The first VM we put into production was a BlackBerry server (a positive example of Microsoft trying to play catch up and kill of a competitor) which run nicely in an environment, that was 100% physical at the time. At Tech-Ed 2005, we first got introduced to Hyper-V. Michael Kleef at the time was running an advance beta build for his presentation demo’s and I was blown away at being able to run multiple VM’s on a single platform, with a single console. At this time I didn’t even know about VMware existence other than reading articles on Hyper-V’s challenge to the incumbent.

Before moving over to Accord/Anittel in later 2009 I had put together a robust Hyper-V cluster, from which we were hosting multiple Windows VM’s…mainly for staging purposes, but as time went on, I added MSCRM and IIS frontends. Cluster Share Volumes introduced in SP2 of Windows 2008 added live migration and all of a sudden the platform was complete. By this stage I knew about VMware as a competing product and I was up to speed with the arguments for and against. My first few months in the new job I got used to working on an ESX4.0 platform, but to be honest, my first experiences where not great…Windows Server 2008 R2 locked up randomly due to an issue with VMware Tool (later fixed in a patch) and I was hearing client issues all over the place…and our own ESX hosts where crashing at times… but I was learning the ins and outs of vSphere and was being shown features such as vMotion and Storage vMotion as well as seeing the efficiencies of how ESX deals with host to VM memory.

The big turning point in my move towards VMware was while working on a client project that involved a Hyper-V Cluster build. The client had been swayed on price and decided to go with Hyper-V with VMM 2010 over VMware Essentials. While the project went well, a glaring design flaw was exposed when the site experienced a long power outage…when both Windows Hosts came back up, the Cluster had no way of firing up, due to DNS not being available as it was on a VM hosted by the cluster…after nearly 8 hours of trying to bring up the cluster, it was pure luck that the old Physical Domain controller was still available, so with that powered back on and on the network I was able to bring up the cluster and all was well. While some of you might say, it’s obvious you needed a DC that was separate to the cluster…be it physical or a VM outside of the Hyper-V cluster, it certainly made be sit up and notice ESX in a new light…that just doesn’t happen with VMware.

Since then I’ve been able to work on Anittel’s multi-site ESX Cluster backed by a strong MPLS network which has stretched from Perth to Sydney and about to head up for Brisbane…being able to live migrate a VM from Perth to Sydney still blows me away. From a hosting point of view I’ve been able to host some very high profile websites on both Windows and Linux and offer geographic redundancy and high availability…VMware’s ability to scale out VM’s with ease makes hosting high load websites a breeze and through working on developing Anittel’s vCloud platform I’ve been involved in some large projects that have allowed me to speak at events across Australia on the power of the cloud as a hosting platform for load testing and running seasonal sites. Through my Twitter feed I’ve been able to post and contribute to the massive social network…there is no better resource for information.

For me, being able to work on vCloud has been an excellent journey that’s allowed me to get truly passionate about the power of virtualization, and while I still feel the platform is still a couple versions away from being mature enough to truly be game changing It’s allowed me to get involved with VMware at the partner level via the VSPP program and in certifying Anittel as a vCloud Powered Partner (http://vcloud.vmware.com) In this I’ve picked up the biggest difference between Microsoft and VMware…VMware is all about the partners…their slogan of the past 12 months has been “Your Cloud” which is an empowering push for partners to deliver services via a partner ecosystem as opposed to Microsoft’s push to their own Public Cloud…be it Office365 or Azure. And you only need to look at Microsoft’s licensing restrictions for VDI to show their current mentality to partner hosting.

With products such as Project Octopus and AppBlast, VMware are further empowering partners to build upon the vSphere platform to delivery cutting edge technology…and while I am still nowhere ready to leave Exchange as my email platform of choice, it won’t be long until Zimbra gets enough legs to challenge. At this stage, VMware don’t want to host their own public cloud…let’s hope it stays that way so they can continue to focus on delivering a solid platform for virtualization on which solid apps can be built upon.

Being awarded a vExpert for 2012 is a great honour and being part of a special group of industry peers is very satisfying for someone who has come full circle when it comes to my journey with Virtualization. One of the unique aspects of this award is that it’s not tied to a certification…which is a good thing for me J While I am aiming to sit my VCP 5 at some stage this year, you can’t beat hands on experiencing, being thrown in the deep end and gaining knowledge via online and social means. Point in case, I’ve learnt as much as I care to about iSCSI storage in ESX due to some massive performance issues experienced at the present time, but I wouldn’t have it any other way…I love technology and all that it brings.

Thanks to VMware and the local Australian Partner Team for the honour and I hope to continue to evangelize and contribute to the community.