Software-Defined Infrastructure and Convergence: Better Together

While SDDC goes a long way toward improving flexibility and agility, not all businesses are ready to take the plunge. For these companies, moving some infrastructure to a converged infrastructure is a good first step.

Karen D. Schwartz, Contributor

May 12, 2016

3 Min Read
Software-Defined Infrastructure and Convergence: Better Together

It’s no secret that most data centers today are too complicated, too labor-intensive to manage and too expensive to run. Study after study confirms that businesses of all sizes are looking for ways to address these issues. One of the most appealing methods of achieving these goals is by moving to a software-defined data center (SDDC). With this model, a combination of virtualization, software-defined networking, software-defined storage, and management and orchestration software work together.

With software-defined infrastructure, IT staff can provision and manage both virtual and physical resources through software. Flexibility and agility are the main benefits. While the traditional process of changing or implementing a new service typically involves several manual steps by different teams that are loosely integrated, SDDC provides a central view of the entire environment. In addition, resources can be managed at a granular level.

Clearly, software-defined infrastructure holds great appeal. According to 451 Research, 21 percent of enterprises have already implemented software-defined infrastructure of some type, and 40 percent more are in the proof-of-concept phase.

While SDDC goes a long way toward improving flexibility and agility, not all businesses are ready to take the plunge. For these companies, moving some infrastructure to a converged infrastructure is a good first step. Not only does converged infrastructure use the same concept of pooling and sharing IT resources, but it introduces virtualization and centralized software-based management into the environment. For IT departments that are dealing with cultural shifts, converged infrastructure can be an important step.

Converged infrastructure solutions also can help IT departments that have already taken steps toward implementing software-defined infrastructure achieve more benefits. One of the biggest benefits is the converged infrastructure’s software-based management console, which can work seamlessly if neither the SDDC nor converged infrastructure’s software is proprietary.

“It provides a unified management interface to the hardware that can be integrated cleanly into the management tools that are running the SDDC for them,” explains John Burke, a principal research analyst with Nemertes Research. “That way, you only have one thing to connect to the SDDC, which should really simplify management of the entire infrastructure.”

Converged infrastructure also helps automate the management of hardware—an unavoidable part of any data center that typically can be somewhat difficult to manage.

For example, when adding a new server, the infrastructure has to find a way to make that new resource available to the software layers. With a converged infrastructure, that happens automatically. The management layer notices the server and configures it according to the defined policy. It then makes those resources available to the hypervisor and immediately becomes part of the SDDC. Without a converged infrastructure, IT staff would have to manually configure the layers until the hypervisor level.

While both converged infrastructure and software-defined infrastructure offer significant benefits to organizations of all sizes, they provide the most benefits when used together.

If at all possible, Burke says, don’t buy them independently: “Let your choice for one be guided by your choice for the other.”

Underwritten by HPE

Part of HPE’s Power of One strategy, HPE Converged Architecture 700 delivers infrastructure as one integrated stack. HPE Converged Architecture 700 delivers proven, repeatable building blocks of infrastructure maintained by one management platform (HPE OneView), built and delivered exclusively by qualified HPE Channel Partners. This methodology saves considerable time and resources, compared to the do-it-yourself (DIY) approach.

Based on a complete HPE stack consisting of HPE BladeSystem with Intel® Xeon® E5 v3-based HPE ProLiant BL460c Gen9 blades, HPE 3PAR StoreServ all-flash storage, HPE Networking, and HPE OneView infrastructure management software, the HPE Converged Architecture 700 can be easily modified to fit within your existing IT environment.

About the Author

Karen D. Schwartz

Contributor

Karen D. Schwartz is a technology and business writer with more than 20 years of experience. She has written on a broad range of technology topics for publications including CIO, InformationWeek, GCN, FCW, FedTech, BizTech, eWeek and Government Executive

https://www.linkedin.com/in/karen-d-schwartz-64628a4/

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