VMware Reveals vCloud Director 1.0
VMware vCloud Director lowers the barrier to creating private and hybrid cloud offerings by enabling IT to offer a virtual data center as a service catalog offering. vCloud director puts an easy access interface on compute, storage and network resource pools and wraps policy around deployment options to maintain separation and security.
VMware gave me a sneak peek at vCloud Director, which leads
me to think that the company is about to set a new benchmark for virtualized
IT.
What's new is that vCloud Director, which VMware released last week at VMworld in
San Francisco, enables IT to
combine pooled compute, network and storage resources as a catalog offering.
VMware calls this a "Virtual Data
Center." The company is hoping
that IT managers will use vCloud Director along with virtual appliances and
regular virtual machines to create catalogs from which services are simply
selected and then automatically provisioned.
Midlevel IT and even technology-savvy business users have the skills necessary
to participate in this process. Bringing the business user closer to the IT
provisioning process is what makes vCloud Director such a potentially big deal.
If vCloud Director plays out in the real world, it will turn IT into a
provisioning monster that meets business computing needs without the lag time
and handwringing that dominated the previous era of physical-only workload
processing.
Under vCloud Director, the underlying physical infrastructure is shared in a
multitenant, isolated fashion by departments or outside organizations that never
know about each other. The result is a cloud resource that can be as private or
public as the operator wishes. In a flourish that marks this 1.0 release as
anything but a trial balloon, there is a branding tab that will enable service
providers or IT departments to create the appearance that these provisioning
services are offered directly by them instead of VMware.
I'm getting the code into eWEEK Labs today to see if the promise is matched by
reality, but, based on operational demonstrations I've seen so far, I'm
inclined to be impressed.
It especially matters to me that VMware is also addressing some of the thorny
issues that have proved tough for IT managers to tackle and for third-party
products to solve. Among these are VM life cycle, fundamental VM security and
automatic VM separation.
For example, vCloud Director provides ample VM lease limits that can trigger
workflows to start resource reclamation-in other words, wiping out unused VMs
and putting valuable physical resources back in the available pool. The limits
I saw don't actually take down the VM but rather trigger an action, such as
sending an e-mail to the IT manager and the VM owner as a lease period is set
to expire. Dealing with VM life cycle up front is one key to ensuring that
valuable resources aren't squandered on idle systems that are no longer needed.
Security comes in the form of several new vShield offerings. There is still
plenty of room for security tools that are offered as virtual appliances, but
vShield should help IT managers ensure that VMs can be protected and isolated
in the virtual network with technology that is baked into the virtualization
infrastructure.
It's worth noting that VMware has released technically significant, industry-leading
virtualization products in back-to-back years. vSphere 4 set the scene for
advances that are now being realized in vCloud Director. If product tests bear
out the advances set forward in vCloud Director, IT could be positioned to not
only reduce the cost of business, but also step up the pace of business productivity.









