Cisco today unveiled its
long-awaited push for a greater role in the enterprise datacenter, with a major new
product initiative called the Unified Computing System aimed at unifying network,
storage, server and virtualization capabilities into one system.
At the heart of the Unified Computing System is Cisco’s new UCS B-Series blades, based
on the Intel Nehalem processor family. The new Cisco blades mark the evolution of Cisco’s
networking convergence efforts and seek to bring Cisco into broader competition against
blade vendors like HP, IBM and Dell.
While Cisco’s long been relegated to handling datacenter networking, the efforts aim
to rev up its ability to win more of the business traditionally dominated by HP, IBM and
Dell — and to cash in on what it sees as an evolution in datacenter architecture.
That evolution — which Cisco calls Data Center 3.0 — has become a rallying cry for
the company, centered around a vision of a flatter datacenter network architecture that
makes it easier for admins to manage, and relying heavily on unified
fabric and virtualization.
“Today is an important day for us,” Cisco CEO John Chambers said during the company’s
launch event. “We’re really talking about the future of the datacenter and how this will
change the datacenter for ever.”
Chambers had a slew of high-level executives on hand today — either appearing
alongside Chambers or being conferenced in remotely — to tout the launch, including EMC
CEO Joe Tucci, Intel CEO Paul Otellini, VMware CEO Paul Maritz and Bob Muglia, president
of Microsoft’s server and tools business. Their purpose aimed to highlight the broad open
ecosystem of partners that Cisco is bringing in on the UCS platform.
Other vendors involved with Cisco on the UCS effort include Accenture, BMC, Red Hat,
Novell, Oracle, and SAP.
Unifying datacenter computing
Management is a key component of the new UCS system, providing users with the ability
to manage storage, networking and application. The Cisco UCS Manager gives users a
graphical user interface (GUI), a command-line interface (CLI) and an
API to let others plug into the architecture.
Cisco claims that its UCS Manager will help to increase productivity and
efficiency.
For the blade chassis, the new Cisco UCS 5100 series blade server chassis can support
eight blade UCS B-Series servers, which all can tap into VMware virtualization. In terms
of networking hardware, Cisco is rolling out the new Cisco UCS 6100 Series Fabric
Interconnects, which are intended to provide Fiber Channel over Ethernet and 10 GbE
interconnects.
A key element wrapping all of Cisco’s UCS efforts is expanding the role of
virtualization. Rob Lloyd, an executive vice president with the company, explained during
the launch event that the UCS is an expansion of the Data Center 3.0 plan.
Lloyd noted that as a result, the UCS will help enterprises to recognize the full
vision of virtualization, which extends beyond just server virtualization. In connection
with technology from partner VMware, the UCS offerings can provide enhanced scalability,
manageability and virtual environment performance, Cisco said.
“What we’re talking about is how to bring virtualization to life,” Chambers said.
Chambers claimed that the Cisco UCS system can enable datacenters to reduce both their
capital and operational expenditures. He said that in Cisco test deployments to date, the
UCS has been able to reduce capital expenditure by at least 20 percent.
Looking ahead to the datacenter of the future
According to Chambers, the launch of UCS is the third step in a five-step process
toward evolving the datacenter. The first step was datacenter networking which Cisco has
been doing for years, while the second is unified fabric, which Cisco started to push in
2008 with the Nexus platform.
Moving beyond the UCS, Chambers said the next step is moving toward private clouds and
after that toward enabling inter-cloud networking.
Article courtesy of InternetNews.com