Today at VMworld 2018, Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS) and VMware, announced Amazon
Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) on VMware. Amazon RDS on VMware
is a service that will make it easy for customers to set up, operate,
and scale databases in VMware-based software-defined data centers and
hybrid environments and to migrate them to AWS or VMware Cloud on AWS.
Amazon RDS on VMware automates database management regardless of where
the database is deployed, freeing up customers to focus on developing
and tuning their applications. Available in the coming months, Amazon
RDS on VMware will support Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL,
MySQL, and MariaDB databases. To learn more about Amazon RDS on VMware,
visit: https://aws.amazon.com/rds/vmware.
Relational
databases support practically all of the world's business-critical
systems operating on-premises. Provisioning, patching, backing up,
cloning, restoring, scaling, and monitoring these databases is tedious,
expensive, and risky - any mistake can lead to extended application
downtime. And, it is even more difficult to set up and manage databases
for high availability, replicating data across multiple nodes.
Self-managed databases in VMware environments face these same
challenges, plus for every database, customers need to create the
database image, install the operating system, install packages, and set
up the database. Supporting multiple versions and patching becomes
cumbersome across an organization, especially as versions,
configurations, and extensions drift with the growth of business. When
security, compliance, and auditing requirements are added, the time
spent on database fleet maintenance becomes a significant cost and
distraction.
For the past nine years, Amazon RDS has been
alleviating the pain of database management for hundreds of thousands of
customers, delivering high availability, durability, and security for
databases running in AWS. Amazon RDS on VMware will bring this same
experience to VMware-based data centers. Amazon RDS on VMware manages
databases from ground to cloud, enabling access to AWS through a single,
simple interface. Amazon RDS on VMware automates database provisioning,
operating system and database patching, backup, point-in-time restore,
storage and compute scaling, instance health monitoring, and failover.
Customers can also use Amazon RDS for VMware to enable low-cost,
high-availability hybrid deployments, database disaster recovery to AWS,
read replica bursting to Amazon RDS in the AWS Cloud, and long-term
database archival in Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3).
"Managing
the administrative and operational muck of databases is hard work,
error-prone, and resource intensive," said Andy Jassy, Chief Executive
Officer, Amazon Web Services. "It's why hundreds of thousands of
customers trust Amazon RDS to manage their databases at scale. We're
excited to bring this same operationally battle-tested service to VMware
customers' on-premises and hybrid environments, which will not only
make database management much easier for enterprises, but also make it
simpler for these databases to transition to the cloud."
"When we
originally partnered on VMware Cloud on AWS, our message was clear -
we're giving customers what they want, the best of both worlds from the
leaders in private and public cloud. With Amazon RDS for VMware, we're
doing it again," said Pat Gelsinger, Chief Executive Officer, VMware.
"This time we're taking innovation from AWS and bringing it to the
hundreds of thousands of customers that have made VMware their private
cloud infrastructure of choice. With this offering from AWS and VMware,
end users and database administrators alike now have access to a
cloud-like database management experience, in whatever environment they
choose to run - private or public cloud. This type of game-changing
innovation shows the depth of the partnership VMware and AWS have, and
the mutual commitment to listening to customers and delivering new and
unimaginable value to help drive their digital transformation."
Available
in the coming months, Amazon RDS on VMware will support Microsoft SQL
Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL, MySQL, and MariaDB databases.