Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ:JAVA) today announced that it will
demonstrate virtualization solutions, resulting from its technical
collaboration with SAP AG, at SAP Virtualization Week 2009, being held
April 20-24 at SAP Labs in Palo Alto, CA. In addition, Sun is announcing
expanded support for the Adaptive Computing Controller tool from SAP via
the Solaris(TM) 10 Operating System and Sun Logical Domains (LDoms)
software. Sun has also joined SAP as a founding member of the "Green IT”
community. For more information on Sun virtualization solutions in
support of SAP applications, visit: http://www.sun.com/sap/virtualization.
"For more than 10 years, Sun and SAP have been delivering virtualization
solutions to our joint customers across the globe,” said Jim McHugh,
vice president of Data Center Software Marketing at Sun. Sun offers a
complete desktop-to-datacenter virtualization product portfolio to help
companies more efficiently deploy SAP solutions, simplify IT
infrastructures and leverage computing resources more effectively.”
Sun also announced its participation as a founding member of the Green
IT community. The Green IT community will work together to generate a
shared map of solutions and services for Green IT and identify
opportunities for co-innovation, co-development and standardization.
Solaris Containers and Solaris ZFS Tested for Compliance With
Adaptive Computing Controller Tool
The Solaris 10 OS, featuring Solaris Containers and the Solaris ZFS(TM)
file system, runs across multiple platforms, enabling customers to
configure and virtualize SAP solutions. Sun has worked closely with SAP
to test the compliance of specifically designed solutions with the
Adaptive Computing Controller tool. The Solaris OS used together with
the Adaptive Computing Controller tool provides a central point of
control for customers to configure their computing resources to run any
service on any server at any time. In addition, Sun is continuing to
work with SAP to integrate and test additional virtualization
technologies with SAP solutions, such as enabling Sun xVM Ops Center to
create, start, stop, and move instances of SAP applications across
groups of servers.
Operating system virtualization can help companies to reduce costs
through sever consolidation and maximum usage of resources. Solaris
Containers allows integrated virtualization with low overhead, at no
cost. Solaris Containers can support thousands of applications on a
single server, which helps reduce server footprint, simplify system
management and reduce costs. The Adaptive Computing Controller tool can
be used in combination with Solaris Containers to provide a single
source of control to operate, observe, manage, and provision SAP
applications in a container environment.
Solaris ZFS provides unparalleled data integrity, capability,
performance and management. Used with Solaris Containers, the ZFS file
system provides a low-cost, flexible solution for fast, easy data
recovery. In addition, storage virtualization powered by the ZFS file
system helps to centralize and pool storage into a single resource,
streamlines the entire storage environment and applies the most
cost-effective resources for each task.
LDoms Support for SAP Business Applications
The latest update to Sun LDoms software features advanced capabilities
to help customers drive greater data center efficiency, including both
Dynamic Domain Mobility, as well as advance network and storage I/O
features to help applications be more resilient to hardware outages and
provide customers the flexibility to modify their systems resources to
address their changing business requirements. With integration for the
Adaptive Computing Controller tool, customers can quickly and easily
move existing physical environments to virtual containers on Solaris 10
and leverage LDoms software to take advantage of the performance, scale
and cost savings of new CMT-based servers.
Sun Participates In SAP Virtualization Week 2009
As part of SAP Virtualization Week 2009, on Tuesday, April 21st, Sun's
Virtualization CTO, Tim Marsland, will participate in a panel
discussion, along with Simon Crosby, CTO, Virtualization and Management
at Citrix; Mike Neil, GM Virtualization at Microsoft; Steve Herrod, CTO
at VMware; and Alex Vasilevsky, CTO, Virtual Computer, hosted by "The
Churchill Club" http://churchillclub.org/eventDetail.jsp?EVT_ID=812.
Sun will also be demonstrating some of its virtualization technologies,
including xVM Ops Center and Sun VirtualBox(TM), as well as
participating in two breakout sessions at SAP Virtualization Week:
"Serving 82,000 students efficiently with the use of Sun Virtualization
Technologies,” delivered by the Technical University of Munich at 9 a.m.
on April 21st and "Sun and SAP Expand your Virtualization Choices” at 3
p.m. on April 22nd.
Brown-Forman and The Technical University of Munich Leverage Sun
Virtualization Solutions
Sun offers a complete desktop-to-datacenter virtualization product
portfolio in support of SAP applications and a comprehensive set of
virtualization solutions to help customers deploy new services faster,
maximize the utilization of system resources and more easily monitor and
manage virtualized environments. For more details, visit: http://www.sun.com/sap/virtualization.
Brown-Forman
Based in Louisville, Kentucky, Brown-Forman Corporation is one of the
largest American-owned spirits and wine companies and is among the ten
largest global spirits companies. Brown-Forman brands include Jack
Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey, Fetzer California Wines, Southern Comfort
and Finlandia Vodka. Brown-Forman has adopted a virtualization strategy
to run its SAP CRM application based on Solaris 10 OS, Solaris
Containers and Solaris ZFS, running on Sun Fire V490 and Sun SPARC(R)
Enterprise T2000 servers.
"In our opinion, the Solaris Operating System performs in a stellar
fashion for 'heavy lift' applications. From a TCO standpoint, it was a
bit of a no-brainer for us to choose Solaris Containers. We plan to use
virtualization to push consolidation to the limit and decrease our
datacenter footprint by 50 percent,” said Mitch Zebrun, lead engineer,
SAP Enterprise Software Administration, Brown-Forman Corporation. "The
flexibility of Solaris Containers also allows us to create containers
for on-the-fly sandbox space, providing a safe environment for
experimenting and testing new SAP applications, reducing the risk
associated with implementing system changes and upgrades.”
Technical University of Munich
A joint effort between Sun Microsystems, SAP AG, and the Technical
University of Munich (Technische Universtät München, TUM) is the SAP
University Competency Center (SAP UCC), which operates over 100 SAP
applications on 70 Sun servers, serving as many as 120 universities and
82,000 users. The SAP UCC has achieved greater flexibility in its
application environment by using Sun hardware and virtualization
technologies such as Solaris Containers and LDoms. As a result, the SAP
UCC has also greatly reduced its physical hardware and power consumption
while still maintaining stable, responsive systems that deliver
excellent performance during heavy workloads.
"After an operating period of two years, we can confirm that
virtualization goes hand in hand with consolidation. We need less
physical hardware and less energy than before, and we continue to use an
environment with stable response times and good performance,” said
Professor Helmut Krcmar, academic director SAP University Competence
Center EMEA and Chair for Information Systems, Technische Universtät
München. "Using Sun technologies such as Solaris 10 Containers and LDoms
have helped us achieve optimal utilization.”
About Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Sun Microsystems develops the technologies that power the global
marketplace. Guided by a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
Computer"(TM) -- Sun drives network participation through shared
innovation, community development and open source leadership. Sun can be
found in more than 100 countries and on the Web at http://sun.com.
Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Java, Solaris, ZFS, VirtualBox and
The Network Is The Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of
Sun Microsystems, Inc. or its subsidiaries in the United States and
other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are
trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. in the
US and other countries. Products bearing SPARC trademarks are based upon
an architecture developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.