Veeam
Software, a developer of tools for virtual environments, now has an official
European presence and new versions of key products aimed at making
virtualisation easier to manage.
The firm, which focuses on managing VMware ESX Server installations, has
opened a new EMEA headquarters in the UK in order to deliver better support to
local customers.
Veeam is also making available version 4 of its
Nworks
package that links VMware environments with existing enterprise management
suites, plus version 3.0 of its
Veeam
Monitor tool.
Nworks consists of two management connectors - a Smart Plug-in for HP
Software Operations Manager and a Management Pack for Microsoft System Center
Operations Manager - that bring VMware ESX environments under the control of
these respective management suites.
While VMware has its own Virtual Center tools, organisations prefer a single
point of control, according to Veeam managing director Colin Wright.
"Pick an institution that already uses HP OpenView [an old name for
Operations Manager] and they won't want two separate environments to manage
their infrastructure," he said, adding that nworks is "the only game in town
that gives you this link to VMware".
Version 4 adds new capabilities including hardware and sensor status, the
firm said, plus support for Virtual Infrastructure 2.5.
Veeam Monitor 3.0 incorporates features requested by customers, according to
Wright. It can consolidate performance monitoring data from multiple VMware
Virtual Centers, and adds the ability to drill down to the virtual machine level
so that administrators can see processor and memory consumption levels.
"Monitor 3.0 lets you see everything in your virtual environment. Even the
most un-virtual-savvy IT person can see what's going on, and where any problems
are happening," Wright said.
Another new tool coming soon will address the problem of virtual machine
sprawl caused by the ease with which new virtual machines can be provisioned.
"Suddenly, you can find yourself with lots of virtual machines popping up
everywhere and consuming resources," he said.
And virtual machines are not as conspicuous as real, physical servers. Wright
cited the case of one Veeam customer that discovered it had nearly 1,000 unused
virtual machines in its data centre.
Veeam Reporter Enterprise, due for release within the next few weeks, will
offer automated reporting for even the largest VMware environments, according to
the firm.
"You can set Reporter to perform scheduled runs, but only generate a report
if it finds new virtual machines or a big growth in storage use," said Wright.
"An admin can take this report then ask what these virtual machines are for, and
are they needed."
Veeam's line-up also includes configuration, backup and recovery tools, all
of which are licensed on a per-processor socket basis.
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