Cloud services are
fighting for market share and are developing the next generation of cloud
management systems. Arguably the four biggest players in the market currently
are OpenStack, CloudStack, Eucalyptus and OpenNebula.
CloudStack : Running on hypervisors like KVN,
vSphere, XenServer, and now Hyper-V, CloudStack is an open-source cloud management platform designed for creating,
controlling, and deploying various cloud services. With its growing
API-supported stack, CloudStack already fully supports the Amazon AWS API
model.
- What’s
good: It really does keep getting better. The latest release of
CloudStack is actually pretty nice. The deployment is really smooth
consisting of only one VM running the CloudStack Management Server and
another to act as the actual cloud infrastructure. In reality, you could
deploy the whole thing on one physical host.
- The
challenges: The first stable release of CloudStack is less than 2
years old, and some still question the rate of CloudStack adoption. Even with
some big advancements, some complain that the architecture and
installation process – although simplified – still requires quite a bit of
knowledge and time to deploy.
- What’s
new:4.1 (with 4.4.2 just
released) sees improved security, hypervisor agnosticism, and advanced
network-layer management. Also big updates revolve around:
- Improved
Storage Management
- Virtual
Private Cloud tiers can now span guest networks across availability zones
- Support
for VMware Distributed Resource Scheduler
- Improved
Support for Hyper-V Zones, VPC and Storage Migration
- Who’s
using it: DataPipe currently
deploys its global cloud infrastructure on CloudStack. According to
DataPipe, their reasons for moving to the platform include:
- Paused
VMs maintain machine state without compute charges
- Scale
storage independent of compute
- Single
security zone across all regions
- Access
to Hong Kong Economic Zone, and Shanghai (Mainland China)
- Additional
cost savings as a result of high performance VM’s that require fewer
computing resources
Outside of Datapipe – CloudStack’s largest current user –
there have been other smaller but important adopters as well. This includes
Shopzilla, SunGard Availability Services, CloudOps, Citrix, WebMD Health, and
several others.
The general consensus is that CloudStack, although strongly
gaining popularity, is that it is still in the shadows of OpenStack.
OpenStack: Managed by the OpenStack foundation,
the actual platform consists of multiple interrelated stack-based projects.
These all then tie into one management interface to provide a cloud computing
management platform.
- What’s
good: It’s definitely a more mature product. Furthermore, there are
more than 150 companies (AMD, Brocade, Dell, HP, IBM, VMware, and Yahoo)
who are all contributing to development. It’s seen as the leader in cloud
platform management and momentum around growth continues.
- The
challenges: Even with so much adoption and development around the
platform, OpenStack is still challenging to deploy and, in many cases,
needs to be managed from various CLI consoles. The fragmented architecture
consists of a number of different modular components including– Compute,
Open Storage, Block Storage, Networking, Dashboard, Identity Service,
Image server, Telemetry, Multiple Tenant Cloud Messaging, Elastic Map
Reduce, and others. The good news is that there are a lot of configuration
and installation scripts out there to use as a template.
- What’s
new: Yes, there are still some technical and deployment challenges.
Has this stopped adoption momentum? Not at all. The latest release of Juno touts
342 new features. The Juno release adds
enterprise features such as storage policies, a new data processing
service that provisions Hadoop and Spark, and lays the foundation for
OpenStack to be the platform for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), a
major transformation driving improved agility and efficiency in telco and
service provider data centers.
- Who’s
using it: Oh yeah, this list is impressive and yes, it’s growing.
Jointly launched by NASA and Rackspace Hosting, OpenStack had some serious
backers from the onset. Now, OpenStack is utilized by such organizations
as AT&T, CERN, Yahoo!, HP Public Cloud, Red Hat OpenShift and several
others.
Let’s face facts: OpenStack is a more mature and more widely
adopted platform. But that doesn’t mean it’s not facing the heat of other
players in the market. There is a lot of money being pumped into platforms like
CloudStack and even Eucalyptus. Right now, OpenStack is enjoying a mature
product set with some very high profile users.
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