Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

(Comma separation for multiple addresses)
Your Message:

Clear Choice Test

Virtualization management Part 6 Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

Introduction|Scorecard|How we did it|Slideshow|Test archive

Virtualization management: Cross-platform tools fall short

Test shows CA has the best handle, but there is room for improvement all around
By Tom Henderson and Brendan Allen, Network World Lab Alliance , Network World , 04/13/2009
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

With the abundance of formidable virtualization platforms on the market today, there ought to be a better way to manage heterogeneous VM farms.

But the bad news is, after comparing four packages whose makers say do just that, we're still looking for an easier way out of cross-platform virtualization management hell.

The VM management packages we tested fell into two categories: add-ons to existing systems management platforms, and newer standalone packages. Microsoft's Systems Center Virtual Machine Manager (MS VMM) and CA's Unicenter-based Network & Systems Management (NSM) with Advanced Systems Management (ASM) fell into the former; while Insystek's TotalView and DynamicOps Virtual Resource Manager (VRM) fell into the latter.

The products varied wildly in their approach to the problem and each fell down in its own places.

•  Microsoft's SC VMM did well for Windows VM guests, and could get a grip on VMware's ESX platform — but only if VMware's expensive VirtualCenter was also installed. SC VMM required Microsoft's Operations Manager to provide life-cycle management, but integrating and patching everything together into a working system proved difficult.
•  Likewise CA's graft of ASM and NSM onto our test network was wickedly difficult. NSM is a powerful, innately heterogeneous management package, and it could produce lots of data regarding our VM farm test simulation, but it stopped short in a number of areas including building and versioning VMs and discovering existing VM infrastructure.
•  DynamicOps VRM was more of a VM library manager or provisioning rather than a full-fledged management package. It was also difficult to integrate, and lacked key features required for monitoring and managing VM infrastructure.
•  Insystek's TotalView possesses all the characteristics of a work in progress. There was lots of promise for things such as policy-based management, but TotalView crashed, had problems with its admittedly brand-new Hyper-V support, and was a source of intense deployment frustration.

Goals and test environment

Each management package had to work with two or more hypervisor platforms picked from a list consisting of VMware's ESX 3.5, Microsoft's Hyper-V and/or Citrix's Xenserver 5.0. We installed these hypervisors on a variety of hardware platforms (see How we did it). And we installed the products under test on vendor recommended hardware and pointed them at VMs running across the multiple hypervisor hosting platforms supported by each.

Each VM management product was tested in five areas important to VM farm administrators:
• Release management (building and provisioning) for VM deployments comprising at least two different hypervisor platforms.
• Moving, adding and changing VM instances (life-cycle management) for VM deployments comprising at least two different hypervisor platforms.
• Operational management as facilitated by administrative and user roles using at least two different hypervisor platforms.
• Incident and troubles management consisting of monitoring, alarms, audit. and reports across multiple virtual host platforms.
• Security management for accessibility to VM instances, host operating environments, and applications across multiple host platforms.

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Partner Content

Gartner 2009 Magic Quadrant for Job Scheduling

Gartner has positioned BMC CONTROL-M in the Leaders Quadrant of their "2009 Magic Quadrant for Job Scheduling." The report assesses the ability to execute and completeness of vision of key vendors in the marketplace. Read a full copy today, courtesy of BMC Software.

Download whitepaper

Dell's SMART Approach to Workload Automation

Read a compelling case study by EMA, Inc. to learn how Dell uses BMC CONTROL-M to cut cost and increase productivity with workload automation.

Download whitepaper

Workload Automation Cost Savings 2 Minute Video

A major computer manufacturer uses BMC CONTROL-M and just four people to schedule and run over 85,000 jobs every month. By switching to BMC CONTROL-M, they more than quadrupled the workload without adding a single staff member.  See how in this 2-minute video overview.

Go to video

Comments (1)
Login
Forgot your account info?

Manage virtualized sprawl with VRMs By Chase on November 13, 2009, 8:09 amhttp://bigdatamatters.com/bigdatamatters/2009/10/cloud-vs-vrm.html

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed