Ready for VMware Explore 2022? Will you be in attendance? Make sure to visit with Pure Storage.
VMware Explore 2022 will be here before you know it, taking place August 29 -
September 1, 2022 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco.
Get
started by reading this exclusive pre-show interview between VMblog and Cody Hosterman, Director of Product Management, Cloud at
Pure Storage. Pure Storage uncomplicates data storage, forever. Pure delivers a cloud experience that empowers every organization to get the most from their data while reducing the complexity and expense of managing the infrastructure behind it. Pure’s commitment to providing true storage as-a-service gives customers the agility to meet changing data needs at speed and scale, whether they are deploying traditional workloads, modern applications, containers, or more.
VMblog: Can you give VMblog readers a quick overview of
your company?
Cody Hosterman: At a high level, Pure delivers a
cloud experience that empowers every organization to get the most from their
data while reducing the complexity and expense of managing the infrastructure
behind it. Pure's commitment to providing true storage as-a-service gives
customers the agility to meet changing data needs at speed and scale, whether
they are deploying traditional workloads, modern applications, containers, or
more. And with a certified customer satisfaction score in the top one percent
of B2B companies, Pure's ever-expanding list of customers are among the
happiest in the world.
VMblog: Your company is sponsoring this year's VMware
Explore event. Can you talk about what that sponsorship looks like? Where can
attendees find you?
Hosterman: Pure Storage is a Platinum sponsor
at this year's VMware Explore. Any registered attendees can visit our onsite
booth (Booth #1201) to learn the latest and greatest in all things Pure for
VMware and chat with our experts. Check out our presence and request a meeting here. We will also be hosting a Bourbon
tasting on Tuesday, August 30 from 5-7pm PT - we encourage you to stop by!
VMblog: VMware has decided to change the name of the
event this year from VMworld to VMware Explore. With VMworld being such a part
of the history, do you have any thoughts on the name change?
Hosterman: If you look back, the buzzwords of
past VMware events were largely centered on the virtual machine (VM)-VM backup,
VM recovery, VM granularity, VM insights. But these are less applicable than
they once were because what we were really talking about was the application.
And the application had a 1:1 relationship with a virtual machine.
A given VM always equaled the same
application. The VM didn't outlast the application, and the application did not
outlast the VM. They lived and died together. In other words, a VM-related
workflow was also an application-level workflow-the transitive property of
application virtualization.
Yet with the continued march
towards containerization, this equation is changing. One VM does not equal one
application. Alternatively, one VM may equal many applications. These
applications might shift to other VMs. The VMs might outlive the applications
or these applications might outlive the VM. This paradigm has shifted. AGAIN.
It did once before with bare metal to hypervisors--and those didn't go away
either. Look at what VMware is doing with Project Monterey. A single platform
to manage bare metal, VMs, and containers.
VMware Explore is a welcome change
to what was previously known as VMworld. While we expect all the great engaging
content and sessions that is typical of "VMworld", VMware's commitment to
evolving its brand speaks volumes to how it is shifting to meet the needs of
today's enterprises.
VMblog: Do you have any speaking sessions during the
event? If so, can you give us the details?
Hosterman: We have several speaking sessions
at this year's VMware Explore event. As a part of our sponsorship, we're
excited to invite attendees to join the following sessions:
- Core Storage Best Practice Deep Dive: There
have been new core storage features released with VMware vSphere and correctly
configuring them is critical to optimum performance and resilience. We'll
review new and common features, as well as best practices. We'll focus on NVMe
over Fabrics (NVMeoF), VMFS, and vSphere Virtual Volumes.
- Speakers: Cody Hosterman, Director, Pure
Storage; Jason Massae, Staff Technical Marketing Architect, VMware
- Active-active stretched cluster vVol support with VMware and Pure
Storage: Stretched clusters offer the ability to
balance VMs, application workloads between two geographically separated
datacenters, with non-disruptive workload mobility enabling migration of
services between geographically close sites without the need for sustaining an
outage. Also, stretched cluster SDDCs offer an availability strategy to
customers. The solution would provide the SDDC with an extra layer of
resiliency in the event of host-level failures within the cluster or with
AZ-level failures within the region. In this session, we will talk about the
stretched cluster support enabled through the joint solution between Pure
Storage and VMware using vSphere Virtual Volumes alongside a preview demo
- Speakers: Alex Carver, Sr Solutions Engineer,
Pure Storage; Jason Massae, Staff Technical Marketing Architect, VMware
- More Applications in Production with Tanzu and Pure Storage: More than 55% of organizations are running Kubernetes in production
today. VMware Tanzu provides a solution to run secure, consistent production
grade Kubernetes on vSphere or any public cloud. The Portworx by Pure Storage
Kubernetes data platform was created to solve the needs of customers that
require multi-cloud mobility, high availability, disaster recovery and backup
for their most critical production applications. Combined with fully automated
application Granular storage for vSphere with Pure Storage FlashArray. This
session will deep dive into how you can get over the common hurdles preventing you
from running more applications in Production in Kubernetes and gaining the
Cloud Native efficiency, end-to-end insights, and agility to provide value to
your business.
- Speakers: David Stamen, Principal Field
Solution Architect, Pure Storage; Jon Owings, Director, Cloud Native Strategy,
Pure Storage
- Build and Publish a PowerShell Module to the PowerShell Gallery: Have you ever created a PowerShell module and needed to share it and
didn't know how? The PowerShell gallery is a great place to do this. Join this
session and learn how to build and publish a PowerShell module to the
PowerShell gallery, and allow your contribution to be shared with the VMware
community.
- Speakers: David Stamen, Principal Field
Solutions Architect, Pure Storage
VMblog: What are you personally most interested in seeing
or learning at VMware Explore?
Hosterman: From a technology standpoint, I'm
most interested in learning about what's new in the next version of vSphere and
Project Monterey, and how VMware will influence public and private environments
going forward. That and of course learning from customers more about their
container strategy--what do containers mean for their VMware infrastructure.
From an industry lens, I'm most interested in seeing the community in person
again. We have tremendous relationships across this industry that we've had to
partially put on hold these past 2+ years. We've got a lot of catching up to
do!
VMblog: What kind of message will an attendee hear from
you this year?
Hosterman: This year, our focus areas at
VMware Explore include application-granular services, application-granular
storage features, and Kubernetes-integrated data management.
- Application granularity: We're focusing on
application granularity in many ways via our Portworx offering, which is
tightly focused on the Kubernetes layer. Portworx, when running within
Kubernetes, on top of VMware, leverages the VMware Cloud Native Storage (CNS)
driver to provision storage. Portworx, or a consumer directly using CNS, takes
advantage of storage policy-based management (SPBM), a focal point of vSphere
Virtual Volumes. This provides application-granular storage via a policy-driven
provisioning mechanism. Together, Portworx + vVols focuses on what matters; not
the VM, but the application and the persistent volume used by an application.
One persistent volume provisioned by vSphere Cloud Native Storage is one volume
on FlashArray. This provides end-to-end performance, capacity, and feature
management/insights.
- Ransomware protection: VMs and containers are
both susceptible to ransomware attacks. A key to protecting against them is
having a way to assign air-gapped protection, ensure it is configured, and
quickly restore. (If a restore takes too long, it may even be cheaper to pay
the ransom). Pure SafeModeTM provides mechanisms to protect data, so no one-not
even internal user administrators-can disable, delete, or alter it. Pure1 provides
fleet-level reporting, and FlashArray provides immutable SafeMode protection
with instant volume recovery, regardless of the dataset size. Our vSphere
plugin provides the recovery process directly within the vSphere Client.
- Next-generation data center technology: Containers
are not the only burgeoning technology for customer environments. To support
next-generation applications, you need next-generation performance and
features-the likes of which traditional SCSI doesn't offer. Pure's early and
on-going support of NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF) and tight engineering
collaboration with VMware via design partnerships keeps you at the bleeding
edge.
- A cloud operating model: Another key point is
that next-generation IT infrastructures aren't just about the technology,
they're also about the model that they
follow. The cloud operating model includes as-a-service, intelligent
management, Opex chargeback, and more. Pure has invested in this via Pure
Fusion, our scale-out storage model that unifies arrays and optimizes storage
pools on the fly. And our evolved business models provide plenty of choice with
Evergreen//Forever, Evergreen//Flex, and Evergreen//One. We've taken our
best-in-class VMware integration and expanded that to cover the move to
containers, all while continuing to simplify managing, running, and protecting
both VM-based and container-based applications. As always, Pure is doing all of
the above with our core principles in mind: simple, cost-effective, and
evergreen.
VMblog: Where can organizations learn more about your
products and services?
Hosterman: Pure has a strong portfolio of
offerings that cater to customers' unique storage needs in today's dynamic
business environment. To learn more about our systems, software and stack
solutions, you can visit: https://www.purestorage.com/products.html
VMblog: What specifically does your company offer a
VMware shop or a VMware implementation? What problems do you solve for them?
Hosterman: Pure offers a portfolio of data
services for your VMware environment giving our customers a Fast, Simple, and
Secure storage platform that can evolve with the customer. We partner with
VMware to design next generation technologies like vVols and NVMe-oF, as well
as offering jointly architecture solutions such as Portworx for Tanzu. We
extend this with features to help protect and mitigate against ransomware
attacks. In short, we really provide industry leading data solutions for any
part of your VMware environment.
VMblog: How does your company work with VMware? Where do
you fit within the VMware ecosystem?
Hosterman: While Pure works with many
partners, VMware has always been and will continue to be a critical and
strategic technology partner.
For more than a decade, Pure has
been a VMware Technology Alliance Partner, collaborating with VMware to help
customers realize the greatest value from their virtual infrastructure and
underlying hardware. As one of the few Advanced Technology Partners with
executive sponsorship at VMware, Pure continues to jointly innovate with VMware
through native feature integrations, our design partnership initiatives, and
VMware Validated Design certifications.
Just in the last few years Pure
has been a design partner for vVols, Site Recovery Manager for vVols, and
NVMe-oF support. We deliver jointly architected solutions through the Pure Validate
Design process, The VMware Validated Designs certification, and other industry
partners such as Cisco Validated designs.
We have a number other joint
initiatives in process so stay tuned for those announcements to come soon.
VMblog: VMware will be covering big topics in their
keynote, but what big changes or trends do you see taking shape in the industry
for 2022 and heading into 2023?
Hosterman: A few trends that I'm seeing play
out across the industry, which we'll see much more of in the next year include:
- Real engagement to the hybrid cloud: This
includes a shift to building a true cloud operating model on-premises. We have
been on the precipice of hybrid cloud for awhile--this is real. Now.
- Managing dual application architectures. What
should be a VM, what should be a container. How do I manage both? Traditional
choice of when something should be virtualized compared to bare metal was
easier. Containerization is a different question altogether. There is a cost to
that choice, so it may not be right for the majority of applications where VMs
are still a better fit. So dealing with that and managing it will be taken head
on.
- Ransomware. No tech conversation is complete
without this in mind--no vendor worth anyone's time won't be driving solutions
here with customers.
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