Unisys is ramping up the virtualization capabilities of its enterprise x86
servers by upgrading to Intel’s Nehalem EP processors and VMware’s latest
version of its virtualization platform.
Unisys announced April 21 that it is incorporating the Xeon
5500 series chips into its ES3000 rack systems and ES5000 blade servers,
and will support the new VMware vSphere 4 platform in all of its lines of
enterprise servers.
The vendor is looking to help businesses grow their virtualization
environments as well as enhance their cloud computing management and deployment
capabilities.
“It’s focused around doing virtualization right,” said Rod Sapp, marketing
director for Unisys’ enterprise servers. “We can help clients with their
end-to-end deployment of virtualized environments.”
Sapp said Unisys can now help businesses with any type of virtualization
environment. Intel’s new Nehalem EP processors—which were announced March
30—not only help businesses improve performance and reduce costs, but also
come with improved virtualization capabilities, which Unisys wants to take
advantage of in its rack and blade servers.
“This is very much a scale-out virtualization [environment],” Sapp said.
Unisys joins a host of other system makers, including Dell, Hewlett-Packard,
IBM and Rackable Systems, that unveiled new
servers based on the processor.
The new VMware vSphere platform—which also was announced April 21—lifts the
ceiling on many of the scalability limits on the hypervisor, making it more of
a scale-up play, he said. The new platform enables Unisys to offer customers
the capability to run significantly more virtual machines on a single physical
server, according to Sapp.
The new systems also help bridge the cost gap between scale-out and
scale-up, he said. Previously, the cost per virtual machine was five times more
in scale-out environments. With the new generation of servers, that cost
difference has dropped to three times more for scale-out deployments. The cost
savings in scale-up environments center around licensing, server management, and
power and cooling.
Sapp said the new capabilities give Unisys a strong framework to help
enterprises create virtualization environments, from the hardware and software
to services and best practices.
The new capabilities come at an opportune time for IT administrators,
who—thanks in large part to the global recession—are being asked to improve
service levels while reducing costs.
“There’s more pressure being put onto IT to start using virtualization more
to cut costs,” Sapp said.
The new rack and blade servers will be available starting April 28, he said.
A 5U tower server with the new technologies will be available around July 30.