UPDATED 09:00 EDT / MAY 31 2018

INFRA

Maxta adds Red Hat support to ease container migration from VMware to OpenShift

Hyperconverged infrastructure maker Maxta Inc. will support Red Hat Inc.’s OpenShift Container Platform, giving users who want to migrate from VMware Inc. vSphere virtualized environment to Red Hat the ability to do so without disrupting their container environment.

Containers are lightweight, self-contained environments that enable  applications to be easily moved between different underlying platforms. Maxta said its private cloud infrastructure enables customers to run a mix of hypervisors and containers on the same hyperconverged platform and to run containers natively without a virtual machine, which provides better resource utilization. Support for multiple hypervisors enables customers to easily migrate from vSphere to OpenShift, the company said.

“This gives customer an open source platform that includes the Red Hat ecosystem for functions like backup and monitoring with no issues from the operating system point of view,” said Kiran Sreenivasamurthy, vice president of product management at Maxta.

Containers are still in their early stages of adoption, and most organizations run them within virtual machines, but Maxta maintains that users will soon want the flexibility to deploy containers everywhere. Maxta’s hypervisor-independent software converges compute, storage and storage networking tiers into a single system that runs on a variety of hardware platforms. It can run multiple applications on a single cluster, in contrast to vertically integrated hyperconverged stacks that generally support only one application.

Maxta also permits users to upgrade server power and storage capacity without buying a new hypervisor software license. “Since Maxta is software, you avoid all the upgrade taxes when refreshing,” Sreenivasamurthy said.

Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform is based upon Kubernetes, which has emerged as the de facto orchestration layer for enterprise container deployment. “Kubernetes has won the container orchestration war and Red Hat enables enterprise Kubernetes deployments with OpenShift,” Maxta founder and Chief Executive Yoram Novick said in a prepared statement.

Founded in 2009, Maxta has raised $35 million in venture funding, an amount that should see it through to profitability, Sreenivasamurthy said. The Red Hat support is provided as a no-charge enhancement to the company’s software, which is also sold in preconfigured bundles on most brands of server hardware.

Image: Unsplash

A message from John Furrier, co-founder of SiliconANGLE:

Support our mission to keep content open and free by engaging with theCUBE community. Join theCUBE’s Alumni Trust Network, where technology leaders connect, share intelligence and create opportunities.

  • 15M+ viewers of theCUBE videos, powering conversations across AI, cloud, cybersecurity and more
  • 11.4k+ theCUBE alumni — Connect with more than 11,400 tech and business leaders shaping the future through a unique trusted-based network.
About SiliconANGLE Media
SiliconANGLE Media is a recognized leader in digital media innovation, uniting breakthrough technology, strategic insights and real-time audience engagement. As the parent company of SiliconANGLE, theCUBE Network, theCUBE Research, CUBE365, theCUBE AI and theCUBE SuperStudios — with flagship locations in Silicon Valley and the New York Stock Exchange — SiliconANGLE Media operates at the intersection of media, technology and AI.

Founded by tech visionaries John Furrier and Dave Vellante, SiliconANGLE Media has built a dynamic ecosystem of industry-leading digital media brands that reach 15+ million elite tech professionals. Our new proprietary theCUBE AI Video Cloud is breaking ground in audience interaction, leveraging theCUBEai.com neural network to help technology companies make data-driven decisions and stay at the forefront of industry conversations.