New Tools Released for Cloud Orchestration, Disaster Recovery
GigaSpaces Technologies and RackWare each released new tools this week in 3.0 versions of their products that handle cloud orchestration and disaster recovery, respectively.
Cloudify 3.0 from GigaSpaces has been completely re-architected for "intelligent orchestration" of cloud applications, the company said. This intelligence provides a new feedback loop that automatically fixes problems and installs updates without human intervention needed. The company said this automatic reaction to problem events and implementation of appropriate corrective measures eliminate the boundary between monitoring and orchestration.
The new Cloudify version provides building blocks for custom workflows and a workflow engine, along with a modeling language to enable automation of any process or stack. A new version planned for release in the fourth quarter of this year will feature monitoring and custom policies that can be used to automatically trigger corrective measures, providing auto-healing and auto-scaling functionality.
GigaSpaces said the new release is more tightly integrated with the open source OpenStack platform, which it said is rapidly becoming the de facto private cloud standard. "The underlying design of Cloudify was re-architected to match the design principles of OpenStack services, including the rewriting of the core services in Python and leveraging common infrastructure building blocks such as RabbitMQ," the company said.
It also has plug-ins to support VMware vSphere and Apache CloudStack, while plug-ins for VMware vCloud and IBM SoftLayer are expected soon. Its open plug-in architecture can also support other clouds, and plug-ins are also expected soon for services such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), GCE Cloud and Linux containers such as the increasingly popular Docker.
Meanwhile, if things go south in the cloud and automatic corrective measures aren't enough, RackWare introduced RackWare Management Module (RMM) 3.0 for cloud-based disaster recovery for both physical and virtual workloads. The product release coincides with a new research report from Forrester Research Inc. that proclaims "Public Clouds Are Viable for Backup and Disaster Recovery."
The system works by cloning captured instances from a production server out to a local or remote disaster recovery site, synchronizing all ongoing changes. In the event of a failover, the company said, a synchronized recovery instance takes over workload processing. The company said this system provides significant improvement over traditional, time-consuming tape- or hard disk-based backup systems. After the production system outage is corrected and the server is restored, the recovery instance synchronizes everything that changed during the outage back to the production server to resume normal operations.
"By utilizing flexible cloud infrastructure, protecting workloads can be done in as little as one hour and testing can be as frequent as needed," the company said. "The solution brings physical, virtual, and cloud-based workloads to the level of protection that mission-critical systems protected by expensive and complex high-availability solutions enjoy."
In addition to the new ability to clone production servers and provide incremental synchronization for changes in an OS, applications or data, the company said RMM 3.0 can span different cloud infrastructures such as AWS, Rackspace, CenturyLink, VMware, IBM SoftLayer and OpenStack.
Posted by David Ramel on 07/30/2014 at 2:14 PM