SUSE Strengthens Its Cloud Solutions With Acquisition Of OpenStack and Cloud Foundry Technology From HPE

Linux distributor SUSE recently announced the finalization of an agreement to acquire OpenStack and Cloud Foundry assets from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE). The agreement enables SUSE to incorporate OpenStack IaaS technology into the SUSE OpenStack Cloud as well as take advantage of HPE’s Cloud Foundry PaaS to ramp up SUSE’s entry into the PaaS space. SUSE’s acquisition of OpenStack and Cloud Foundry technology and talent positions it to deliver a stronger OpenStack Cloud offering to its customers. Meanwhile, SUSE’s acquisition of HPE’s Cloud Foundry assets signals SUSE’s recognition of the importance of PaaS platforms to emergent DevOps and cloud-native application development practices. SUSE’s acquisition of HPE’s OpenStack and Cloud Foundry technology and talent marks the emergence of another critical player to the commercial OpenStack space whose deep experience commercializing open source software qua Linux bodes well for its ability to productize OpenStack for the enterprise. HPE has agreed to designate SUSE as its preferred partner for OpenStack, Cloud Foundry and Linux technologies in a move that bolsters SUSE’s acquisition further, particularly given that HPE plans to OEM the SUSE OpenStack Cloud and Cloud Foundry PaaS within its Helion and Stackato solutions. Stay tuned for the emergence of SUSE’s Cloud Foundry PaaS because part of the success of SUSE’s IaaS offering is likely to hinge on its ability to offer turnkey PaaS offerings on its OpenStack-based IaaS platform.

SUSE Cloud 4 Delivers OpenStack IaaS With Enhanced Support for Ceph and VMware

Enterprise Linux distributor SUSE recently announced news of SUSE Cloud 4, an IaaS platform based on OpenStack Icehouse, the latest release of OpenStack. SUSE Cloud 4 features support for the Ceph distributed storage system marked by the ability to deploy distributed block and object storage on commodity hardware. SUSE’s support for Ceph enables the creation of “massively scalable, highly reliable storage clusters” whose deployment can be automated using the SUSE Cloud Administration Server. Version 4 of the SUSE Cloud also features “enhanced integration between existing VMware vSphere environments and OpenStack” in addition to “advanced VMware capabilities for image management and support for VMware Virtual SAN™.” Supported hypervisors include KVM, Xen, Microsoft Hyper-V and VMware vSphere. Overall, the platform boasts enhanced scalability and availability in addition to increased automation. SUSE Cloud 4’s integration of Ceph represents a particularly notable accomplishment given Ceph’s ability to increase the flexibility and scalability of OpenStack deployments.