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brandon_butler
Senior Editor

IBM + Red Hat = An open source hybrid cloud

News
Mar 20, 20173 mins
Cloud ComputingOpen Source

IBM's public cloud will run Red Hat's OpenStack and Ceph storage products

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Credit: Thinkstock

IBM Cloud and Red Hat OpenStack and storage teams are partnering to integrate their products and in doing so are creating a compelling hybrid offering for open source-minded customers.

The announcement came at IBM’s InterConnect conference in Las Vegas, where an estimated 20,000 developers, customers and IBM partners are gathering.

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The crux of the partnership is that customers who use Red Hat’s OpenStack private cloud platform and Ceph Storage product will now be able to run both of those in IBM’s cloud. Don Bulia, a general manager in IBM’s cloud division says the idea behind the partnership is that Red Hat customers would be able to extend their Red Hat-based environments into the IBM public cloud, which will run the same management and software tools they have on premises.

“Once you develop this consistency across environment, it gives you the ability to expand out into the IBM cloud with the same management experience, giving you the ability to virtually add capacity as needed,” Bulia says.

It’s not an entirely novel concept. The move is similar to an announcement that IBM and VMware made early last year. IBM also runs VMware management platforms, including its suite of software defined data center products ranging from vSphere to NSX and Virtual SAN.

IBM is attempting to position it’s cloud as a natural destination for large companies with big investments in on-premises management software from Red Hat and VMware. Neither of those companies have a public cloud platform that would be the go-to destination for these workloads. VMware has wound down its vCloud Air public cloud platform, but it does have a series of service provider partners that customers can deploy their workloads on to. Red Hat has a hosted version of its OpenShift PaaS, but it has long made an effort to partner with the major public cloud vendors instead of competing with them on the IaaS layer. Red Hat offers its software on AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google’s cloud too but this IBM-Red Hat partnership seems to be deeper product integration than those.

For Red Hat customers, the partnership with IBM creates another option for hosting their workloads. For IBM, it’s another way the company is attempting to gain share in the public cloud versus rivals with larger IaaS public cloud market share.

brandon_butler
Senior Editor

Senior Editor Brandon Butler covers the cloud computing industry for Network World by focusing on the advancements of major players in the industry, tracking end user deployments and keeping tabs on the hottest new startups. He contributes to NetworkWorld.com and is the author of the Cloud Chronicles blog. Before starting at Network World in January 2012, he worked for a daily newspaper in Massachusetts and the Worcester Business Journal, where he was a senior reporter and editor of MetroWest 495 Biz. Email him at bbutler@nww.com and follow him on Twitter @BButlerNWW.

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