News
        
        Google, Cisco Partner Up on the Cloud
        Cisco's HCI comes to Google Cloud Platform.
        
        
        
Google and Cisco are joining forces in a bid to help both companies in their efforts to catch up to Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure in the cloud space. 
In a move to make Google's public cloud services more  appealing to enterprise customers, the company and Cisco are partnering to  bring hybrid cloud infrastructure that's compatible with the Google Cloud  Platform (GCP). The pact will enable workloads to run on Cisco UCS hyper-converged infrastructure  hardware and the GCP. 
 Both AWS and Microsoft offer hybrid cloud  solutions, and they have a wide lead on Google with the world's largest cloud  footprints and infrastructure. Microsoft is hoping to maintain its lead over  Google and gain ground on AWS with its new hybrid cloud solution, Azure Stack, which  is now just starting to ship from Dell EMC, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and  Lenovo. Cisco is also taking orders for its Azure Stack solution, which is set  for imminent release. 
 It looks like a win-win for both Cisco and Google: Cisco will also offer infrastructure compatible  with GCP, widening its cloud reach, while Google is gaining  significant extension into enterprises. "Applications in the cloud can take  advantage of on-premises capabilities (including existing IT systems)," said  Kip Kipton, VP of Cisco's Cloud Platform and Solution Group, in a blog  post announcing the pact. "And  applications on-premises can take advantage of new cloud capabilities."
  Cisco HyperFlex HX-Series systems will enable hybrid  workloads to run on-premises and in GCP. The hybrid GCP offering is based on  Kubernetes, the open source container orchestration and management platform  that will provide lifecycle management, support for hybrid workloads and policy  management. Kubernetes now integrates with Cisco's software-defined networking  architecture, just upgraded earlier  this month with the third release of Cisco's Application Centric  Infrastructure (ACI).
 The new ACI 3.0 includes improved network automation,  security and multi-cloud support. Now that ACI offers Kubernetes integration, customers  can deploy workloads as microservices in containers. Cisco said the Kubernetes  integration also provides unified networking constructs for containers, virtual  machines and bare-metal hardware and lets customers set ACI network policy.
 Cisco's hybrid cloud offering also will include the open source  Istio service management tooling. Itsio connects, manages and secures  microservices. According to a description on its  Web site, Istio manages traffic flows between microservices, enforces  access polices and aggregates telemetry data without requiring changes to the  code within the microservices. Running on Kubernetes, Istio also provides  automated HTTP, gRPC, WebSocket and TCP load balancing and various  authentication and security controls. 
 The Cisco offering will also include the Apigee API  management tool. Apigee, a leading provider of API management software, was  acquired by Google last year. It enables legacy apps to run on-premises and  connect to the cloud via the APIs.
 "We're working together to deliver a consistent Kubernetes  environment for both on-premises Cisco Private Cloud Infrastructure and Google's managed  Kubernetes service, Google Container Engine," said Nan Boden, Google's head of  global technology partners for GCP, in a blog  post published by Cisco. "This way, you can write once, deploy anywhere and  avoid cloud lock-in, with your choice of management, software, hypervisor and  operating system." Boden added that Google will provide a cloud service broker  to connect on-premises workloads to GCP services for machine learning, scalable  databases and data warehousing.
  The partnership with Cisco promises to make GCP a stronger  candidate for enterprises to consider moving workloads to the Google public  cloud, though it's not the first. Among some notable partnerships, Google earlier  this year announced Nutanix will run a GCP-compatible implementation of Kubernetes on its  hyper-converged systems. And at VMworld, Google and Pivotal Cloud Foundry launched the Pivotal Container Service (PKS) to provide compatibility between Kubernetes  running vShpere and the Google Container Engine. However, that VMworld  announcement was overshadowed by VMware's biggest news of its annual  conference, the plan  to offer its VMware Cloud on AWS service. 
 While Cisco is offering customers an alternative to Azure  Stack with its new Google partnership, Microsoft has made significant  investments in support for Kubernetes orchestration. In addition to its Azure Container Service (ACS) with support for Kubernetes,  Microsoft yesterday launched the preview of its managed Kubernetes service,  called AKS.
 Planned for release in the latter part of 2018, testing for  the GCP-compatible Cisco offering will begin early in the year.  
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.