
VMworld Wednesday Lessons Learned

4. What is DevOps all about?
Cloud Consumers want the following, and these are driving network virtualization:
The Whiteboard snapshot above was drawn to demonstrate the basic components of NSX and how VMs communicate using the virtual overlay netowrk
The example uses ESXi on left and KVM hypervisor on right (HV1 and HV2)
Started out a productive day with my first-ever Fritatta and some delicious croissants at breakfast in Moscone South. Having seen the debacle of “breakfast” at last year’s VMworld, the seating this year was at least an improvement with areas available in both Moscone South and West.
I went to the General Session at 9am, but as I was seated towards the back I couldn’t see the bottom of the screens. There were no screens overhead, only 3 or 4 large screens up front. In addition, the vmworld2013 wireless SSID was nowhere to be seen. The Press SSID (vmwaremedia) was available but locked down. Attempts to use my AT&T MyFi were stifled due to the overwhelming RF interference in the area. And I had AT&T cell coverage but no throughput. Having seen how well wireless CAN be delivered at Cisco Live, even in this kind of space for 20,000+ people, I was very disappointed. I decided to go watch the Keynote from the Hang Space, but that was full to capacity with a line waiting to get in. I finally gave up and walked over to Moscone West, 3rd floor, and sat at a charging station watching the live stream while waiting for my first breakout session. (Kudos at least for the stream working.)
My first session was “Moving Enterprise Application Dev/Test to VMware’s internal Private Cloud — Operations Transformation (OPT5194).” This was a great story of how leadership from the top pushed VMware to implement Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). Kurt Milne (@kurtmilne) (VMware Director of CloudOps) and Venkat Gopalakrishnan (VMware Director of IT) shared lessons learned during VMware’s internal implementation of a service catalog and the automation of processes which used to require manual intervention by cross-functional teams over the course of weeks. The process of standing up a new Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC) series of dev/test/uat/stage/prod environments has been greatly automated and provisioning time reduced from 4 weeks to 36 hours and they plan to reduce it to 24 hours in the near future. If you’re going through a similar journey in your organization, this session is a must see when recordings and slides are released after the conference. I believe the session was also live-tweeted by @vmwarecloudops.
The other session I attended today was the very popular “What’s New in VMware vSphere” presented by Mike Adams (http://blogs.vmware.com/vsphere/author/madams). We reviewed some of the new features released in vSphere 5.1 last year as well as some of the changes made for vSphere 5.5 this year. Some key takeaways for me (your mileage may vary):
In addition to the sessions I was able to complete three labs (between yesterday and today) all related to VMware’s recently announced vCloud Hybrid Service (vCHS). HOL-HBD-1301, HOL-HBD-1302, and HOL-HBD-1303 give a good introduction to the components and steps necessary to migrate workloads from a vSphere or vCloud Director environment in your own datacenter to the vCHS environment, as well as networking & security components and managing the service.
One big announcement during the morning General Session/Keynote was the release of VMware’s network virtualization product called NSX. This is the marriage of Nicira (an earlier VMware acquisition) and vCNS/vShield in a new product. As a network engineer by background and training, this is particularly interesting to me. I was able to start the NSX lab (HOL-SDC-1303) but couldn’t yet finish as I ran out of time. I plan to finish tomorrow. More to come on that.
I have to give a big thumbs-down to VMworld’s requirement that we all get our badges scanned as we enter lunch. I don’t remember this last year, nor have I ever seen this at any other conference I’ve attended. What gives? It’s hard to hold a herd of hungry humans back from the food!
Finally, I visited with some fine folks at the Rackspace booth in the Solutions Exchange, including Waqas Makhdum (@waqasmakhdum). I now understand that Rackspace’s Openstack platform uses a different hypervisor solution than VMware or Amazon EC2, but they offer guaranteed uptime with a phone number to call for support and apparently pretty reasonable costs for running a VM you control or even hosting the VM and just having you run your application on it. Also, I learned they offer VMware-based Managed Virtualization to allow you to “Set up a single-tenant VMware environment at our data center, rapidly provision VMs, and retain full control using the orchestration tools you’re familiar with.” (Ref: http://www.rackspace.com/managed-virtualization/)
I’m failing to mention all the great people I met and conversations but one would expect nothing less from a great conference!
It’s time for VMware’s 10th Annual VMworld conference in beautiful San Francisco! This is my second trip to VMworld and I’m looking forward to making it my best one yet. As such, I’d like to share some of my goals for this week. I feel that publishing my objects tend to keep me motivated.
1. Gain better understanding of NSX (came from vCNS/vShield and Nicira) and dive more into details of VMware networking
2. Better understand OpenStack and maybe take a test drive
3. Learn some basic functions of PowerCLI
4. What is DevOps all about?
5. Set up vCloud Director and/or vCenter Orchestrator and try it out
6. Learn about VMware’s Internal Private Cloud for dev/test workloads
7. What is Cloud Foundry and how does it relate to my company?
If you have insights or can point me in the right direction please do! Comment below or find me on Twitter (@swackhap).
-Swack