Virtually Speaking

Dan Kusnetzky, Paula Rooney and Ken Hess

Oracle VM 3.0 launch - the hypervisor battle heats up

By | August 24, 2011, 3:01am PDT

Summary: VMware, Citrix, Microsoft, Red Hat and the open source community have all been trying to take the hypervisor high ground. Oracle has just jumped into the battle with guns blazing. Can Oracle unseat VMware?

The battle over the virtual machine software market, also known as the hypervisor market, has just heated up a notch. Oracle has leaped onto the field with guns blazing hoping to take down the almighty at VMware. Oracle joins Citrix, Microsoft, Red Hat, the Xen open source community, the KVM open source community in the effort to take on the leading supplier of virtual machine software, VMware. In this announcement, Oracle is trying to one-up VMware in a number of key areas.

What did Oracle announce?

Oracle announced Oracle VM 3.0, Oracle’s own distribution of  Xen virtual machine software. It also announced the Oracle VM Storage connect to improve how virtual servers interact with storage.

Here’s how Oracle describes the key features of Oracle VM 3.0:

  • Storage Connect plug-in framework: lets administrators transparently manage virtualization and attached storage arrays together through Oracle VM Manager while fully leveraging their investments in advanced storage functionality, such as deduplication and fast clone. Plug-ins are being developed by Oracle for its Pillar Axiom SAN storage system and Sun ZFS Storage Appliance, and by other and leading storage providers, including Fujitsu, Hitachi Data Systems, and NetApp.
  • Centralized network configuration and management: enables configuration of all server and VM networking from the Oracle VM Manager GUI, including advanced options such as bridging, bonding, VLANs and multi-pathing.
  • Improved ease-of-use: new features including server and storage discovery help speed infrastructure set-up while a new, dynamic “real-time” HTML user interface and comprehensive event tracking capabilities facilitate management over time.
  • Advanced, policy-based management capabilities: automates dynamic resource scheduling and server power management to improve application quality of service and reduce cost and power consumption in support of “green IT” initiatives.
  • Open Virtualization Format (OVF) industry standard support: enables customers to use Oracle VM Manager to import OVF based software assemblies to accelerate application deployment.

Snapshot analysis

Since Oracle’s acquisition of Sun Microsystems, we’ve seen an increased emphasis on a complete stack of Oracle products including the following:

  • A family of systems
  • An operating system (Linux)
  • A virtual machine software product (Oracle VM)
  • Development environment
  • Management tools for the entire Oracle environment
  • Database engine
  • Applications

I find myself reminded of IBM in the early 1970s.

When surveyed, Oracle’s customers and partners have complained about Oracle’s tactics in trying to take over the complete IT environment in its customer’s data centers. Oracle has dropped support of its products on some competitive systems, has said that it will not test and support opposing virtual machine technology and now appears to be attacking VMware straight on on the eve of VMware’s bash, VMworld.

Oracle’s VM 3.0 clearly is designed to out gun VMware in a number of key areas: management, connections with storage, scalability, and, of course, support of Oracle’s applications and tools. Will this be enough to turn VMware hypervisor customers into Oracle hypervisor customers? I don’t think so.  We’ll need to read more customer success stories, learn more about whether Oracle VM really out performs VMware, and learn if Oracle’s hypervisor support is really enterprise-class.
Since Citrix, Microsoft, Red Hat, the Xen open source community, the KVM open source community and a few others are also charging up the hill towards VMware, it is going to be an interesting battle.

It appears to me that all of this direct competition is going to force VMware to do the following things:

  • Revise its recently revised pricing strategy to more directly deal with the competition
  • Revise its terms and conditions (I’ve been hearing people talk about the VMware Hypervisor tax on their organization. Could Oracle’s announcement force a change?)
  • Support policies for operating systems, third party applications and third party tools

Let’s see what VMware does next week.  I’ll be at VMworld and will post what I learn.

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Daniel Kusnetzky is a distinguished analyst and the founder of the Kusnetzky Group LLC.

Disclosure

Dan Kusnetzky

The Kusnetzky Group LLC is an independent technology industry research firm that focuses on system software, virtualization and cloud computing technology.

Dan's opinions are based upon research, personal experiences and actual use of technology. They are not based upon the relationships the company may or may not have with suppliers, end user organizations, the media, consultants or other analysts.

Dan's research is available on a subscription basis through the Kusnetzky Group LLC. Dan's attendance at industry events or at client meetings may be sponsored by the client. Clients may provide hardware or software for testing prior to the publication of analysis that includes that product. Clients may also provide shirts, jackets, coffee cups, folders, backpacks, pens and other event chotchkies. While nice, these don't effect Dan's opinions or insight about those clients or their products.

Biography

Dan Kusnetzky

Daniel Kusnetzky, Analyst and Founder of Kusnetzky Group LLC, is responsible for research, publications, and operations. Mr. Kusnetzky has been involved with information technology since the late 1970s. Mr. Kusnetzky has been responsible for research operations at the 451 Group; corporate and marketing strategy for Open-Xchange; system software and virtualization research at IDC; and program and product management at Digital Equipment Corporation.; Today, Mr. Kusnetzky focuses on system software, virtualization technology and cloud computing.

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fnoeztl 22 vbt
dmakrejktt55-24379086954664974652993223395316 25th Nov
lpdaqz,mjvzaznq53, kjafk.
It looks like Oracle really has an excellent grasp on this market! The product seems strong, and the response from users, thus far, is very positive!

I have yet to try this product from them, I am still using vcloud connector from Bluelock. I have had extensive success using this product, and it just goes to show...when it comes to this industry, competition is very high!
No doubt Oracle is serious in improving their VM story, but skepticism will persist in the enterprise with concerns of aligning with Oracle's hegemony in enterprise software. VMware will likely not make substantive changes to their new licensing model in the short term given their dominance, despite all the verbal threats of rejection from the enterprise. The open source effort for the hypervisor is likely to be the key to drive the market change required to modify supplier behavior in this space and commoditize the product to squeeze the unnecessary premium the enterprise pays for this application.

Dave Young
NET(net), Inc.
www.netnetweb.com
0 Votes
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RE: Oracle VM 3.0 launch - the hypervisor battle heats up
orange.kangaroo@... Updated - 30th Sep
I've been using Oracle VM for many years now, and I've been using Oracle VM 3 since it's release to the public. It's sad because I though version 2 was awful and it seems that 3 is worse. The Xen underpinnings are quite robust, but the Oracle VM Manager is half-baked junk. You can't expect customers to take something with so many bugs in it seriously. C'mon Oracle, you can do better. VMware's main advantage is the management tool. It's stable and meaningful and lightyears ahead of everyone else.
0 Votes
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fnoeztl 22 vbt
dmakrejktt55-24379086954664974652993223395316 25th Nov
lpdaqz,mjvzaznq53, kjafk.

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