Cumulus and Nutanix Team Up to Simplify Hyperconverged Infrastructure Networking
The partnership is the latest in a series of moves by HCI vendors to integrate networking into their solutions.
Data center network software provider Cumulus Networks has partnered with Nutanix to simplify networking on hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI).
Cumulus said Tuesday that it has integrated the Cumulus Linux operating system and NetQ management software with Nutanix’s Prism management software. As a result, data center operators deploying Nutanix-powered hyperconverged equipment can now provision and manage server, storage, and network resources through a single user interface, Cumulus CEO Josh Leslie explained. Network management is no longer in its own separate silo.
“One of the challenges with HCI is that it simplifies compute and storage, but it doesn’t really address the networking part,” Leslie said in an interview with Data Center Knowledge. “That’s what this partnership is about. We help automate the process of plugging Nutanix systems into a network and scaling them. It makes the process of using Nutanix systems and the Cumulus switching fabric incredibly simple and seamless.”
Analysts say this is a smart move for Cumulus because hyperconverged infrastructure is a lucrative, fast-growing market, and Nutanix is a market share leader.
Hyperconverged systems – which integrate server, storage, and virtualization into a small form-factor appliance – generated $1.5 billion in revenue during the 2018 second quarter, a 78.1 percent increase in year-over-year sales, according to the most recent data IDC has made available publicly. Nutanix, which has changed its business model from selling hyperconverged hardware to software, captured 34.2 percent of the HCI software revenue and is in a virtual tie with VMware for the market share lead.
“Cumulus has to work more closely with vendors such as Nutanix because the enterprise market is finding HCI attractive,” Brad Casemore, IDC’s research VP for of data center networks, told us. “By integrating seamlessly into the Nutanix environment, Cumulus is broadening its market reach. It should make it easier for the company to position itself to the Nutanix installed base.”
Cumulus, which offers a Linux OS for data center network switches, competes against market share leaders Cisco, Arista Networks and Juniper Networks and other startups like Big Switch Networks in the data center networking market.
The Cumulus-Nutanix partnership is part of a larger trend where vendors have discovered that the network has to be integrated into an HCI offering. Initially, HCI vendors focused on compute and storage and treated networking as an afterthought, Casemore said.