VMware Integrates Cloud Foundation with VxRail, Expands Its AWS Cloud

Drops a series of product updates, all meant to simplify and unify its multi-cloud and hybrid products.

Wylie Wong, Chips and Hardware Writer

March 19, 2019

3 Min Read
Keynote audience at VMworld 2018 in Las Vegas
Keynote audience at VMworld 2018 in Las VegasVMware

By Wylie Wong -- Pushing forward its hybrid and multi-cloud-centered product strategy forward, VMware had announced updates to its software portfolio, expanded VMware Cloud on AWS to three new regions, and announced new cloud partners.

The company announced Tuesday tight integration between a new version of its VMware Cloud Foundation software and its sister company Dell EMC’s VxRail hyperconverged infrastructure appliances, allowing enterprises to speed and simplify private cloud deployments.

The new VMware Cloud on AWS availability regions are central Canada, Paris, and Singapore. More than 60 partners are now building or delivering managed services offerings for the service, which essentially provides a VMware cloud inside Amazon data centers, operated by VMware.

The company also rolled out new features for its CloudHealth tool, which allows organizations to manage cloud usage, costs, security, and governance. The tool, acquired by VMware last summer, now supports multi-cloud reporting, including the ability to analyze cloud costs and usage across teams, and projects or applications on AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud, Joe Kinsella, VP and CTO of CloudHealth by VMware, said.

This latest round of cloud announcements appears aimed at showing momentum behind VMware’s cloud strategy and its goal to provide enterprises and cloud service provider partners a consistent infrastructure for all their hybrid multi-cloud needs. 

Related:VMware’s SDN Strategy Now Revolves Around Hybrid and Multi-Cloud

During a press briefing, VMware executives reiterated that the company’s entire cloud portfolio allows customers to build modern applications, including support for containers in private clouds, public clouds, and edge environments.

“As the world moves to multi-cloud… VMware again will be the strategic partner for the next decade – just as we were the last 20 years around virtualization,” Ajay Patel, senior VP and general manager of VMware’s cloud provider software business unit.

The VxRail Integration

VMware and Dell EMC co-engineered the integration between VxRail hyperconverged appliances and VMware Cloud Foundation, a set of integrated software that combines compute, storage, networking, security, and cloud management services to run applications in private and public environments.

Dell, for example, exposed its VxRail APIs to Cloud Foundation. Now, instead of two slightly different software stacks customers get a unified and simplified management experience, Chad Dunn, VP of product management for Dell EMC VxRail, said.

The solution (available in April) helps automate private-cloud deployment on premises and integrates with public cloud providers for workload mobility, Dunn said.

Related:AWS Is Coming to Enterprise Data Centers, With or Without VMware

It is “the fastest, simplest, and most seamless way to deploy hybrid cloud,” Patel said.

Rick Villars, IDC’s research VP of data center and cloud, said the integration is important for customers of both VMware and Dell EMC.

Cloud Foundation on VxRail has three potential types of users, he said: enterprises with existing private clouds in need of hardware and software upgrades, companies wanting to provide managed services to enterprises, and organizations wanting to build and deploy new applications to multiple edge locations.

“If I’m building a new inventory system for my stores, or building a patient health tracking system for hospitals, and I want to replicate it to 10, 100, or 1,000 locations, I now have a platform to create a SaaS-like service, and I can deploy it to multiple locations,” he said.

VMware said the new version 3.7 of VMware Cloud Foundation will support automated virtual desktop deployment of virtual desktops using its Horizon 7 VDI software.

The company also announced vCloud Director 9.7, software that allows cloud providers to offer multi-tenant environments. The new version, available sometime in the next two weeks, unifies private and multi-tenant cloud management of VMware environments, which simplifies the management of on-premises vSphere deployments and multi-tenant provider clouds, the company said.

Finally, VMware vCloud Availability 3.0, which allows service providers to offer disaster recovery-as-a-service offerings, now unifies onboarding, migration, and disaster recovery services to and between multi-tenant clouds. That product will also be available within the next two weeks, the company said.

About the Author

Wylie Wong

Chips and Hardware Writer

Wylie Wong is a journalist and freelance writer specializing in technology, business and sports. He previously worked at CNET, Computerworld and CRN and loves covering and learning about the advances and ever-changing dynamics of the technology industry. On the sports front, Wylie is co-author of Giants: Where Have You Gone, a where-are-they-now book on former San Francisco Giants. He previously launched and wrote a Giants blog for the San Jose Mercury News, and in recent years, has enjoyed writing about the intersection of technology and sports.

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