Advertisement
Promo

Server platforms Toolkit

CeBit 2009

SAP and IBM offer joint cloud migration

Colin Barker ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 05 Mar 2009 12:05 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

SAP and IBM on Tuesday unveiled a cloud migration service at the CeBIT 2009 show in Hanover, aimed at moving of SAP applications across Power6 systems and via cloud computing.

The companies are developing the service as part of the Reservoir cloud-computing project, a European Union-funded and IBM-led joint research initiative of 13 European partners intended to develop technologies that help automate the demand for IT resources in a cloud-computing environment.

The Reservoir project is looking at issues such as the increasing complexity of large datacentres, the requirement to dynamically adapt IT structures to changing business requirements and circumstances, and increasing energy costs.

In the technology demonstration at CeBIT, IBM and SAP showed that enterprise applications can be run inside the cloud. They demonstrated how workloads can be migrated across physical servers and datacentres.

Yaron Wolfsthal, chief researcher at IBM's Haifa Labs, told ZDNet UK that the demonstration illustrated how IBM and SAP could show "different workloads being migrated from one physical server to another in a virtual environment".

"What we have been working on is being able to move an application from one server to another, either in the datacentre or from one datacentre to another, and making that process happen so that, while it moves, the application carries on working normally," said Wolfsthal. "We have demonstrated this happening across geographies, from one to another."

Wolfsthal said that for now the process will only work on like-for-like environments, so from one SAP application running on Power6 to another also working on Power6. "That is the limitation," he said, "but I believe this is the first time anyone has demonstrated live migration from one physical server to another in this way".

However, with this development, Wolfsthal said that IBM and SAP were able to show "multiple, interconnect clouds" working. "You can move applications from one cloud to another now," he said.

The work is continuing as IBM and SAP further develop it, Wolfsthal said. "We are looking at areas like load balancing and being able to easily drop under-used servers and balance the system automatically as this happens," he said. Wolfsthal claimed that they had already had considerable success with the project but stressed that it was still a research project run with the help of the EU. "Information from this will be freely available for anyone to use," he said. "But do we think IBM may turn it into a product? I hope so."

In a statement, IBM said it offers a Live Partition Mobility capability to move one IBM Power6 server to another in the datacentre "with no application downtime".

IBM's partner, SAP, also believes this is a promising new technology. Joachim Schaper, vice president for Europe at SAP Research, said in a statement: "The breakthrough is that applications can flexibly move across remote physical servers, regardless of location, which makes our work a strong enabling technology for the cloud." 

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
3 out of 3 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

More in this Special Report

Roundup: The best bits from CeBIT 2009

Roundup: The best bits from CeBIT 2009

ZDNet UK visited Hanover in Germany to see what was on offer at this year's CeBIT technology fai more

What caught our eye at CeBIT 2009

What caught our eye at CeBIT 2009

Interesting exhibits at this year's CeBIT technology show included secure VoIP software for Android, the latest Eee PC netbook and MSI's Winki dongle more

Nvidia, AMD announce new graphics chips

Nvidia, AMD announce new graphics chips

Nvidia says the chips use less power than its previous products, while AMD launches what its calls its most compact graphics chip architecture more

CeBIT organisers bullish despite fewer exhibitors

CeBIT organisers bullish despite fewer exhibitors

Europe's biggest technology fair expects to attract half-a-million visitors, while itself continuing to experience a significant reduction in trade exhibitors more

Where'd all the Green IT go?

Where'd all the Green IT go?

Last year the CeBIT tech show in Germany had a small but worthy Green IT section. This year they decided to give it more space... more

Asus is heart touching no more

Asus is heart touching no more

Asus has, I am sad to report, abandoned its motto, 'Rock Solid. Heart Touching'... more

Photos: Dual-screen concept notebook from Asus

Photos: Dual-screen concept notebook from Asus

At CeBIT 2009, ASUS shows off a concept system with dual displays more

SAP and IBM offer joint cloud migration

SAP and IBM offer joint cloud migration

The two companies demonstrated a new tool at CeBIT 2009, based on IBM's Power 6 systems that offers live migration via cloud computing more

Photos: Eee PC Touch on the CeBIT show floor

Photos: Eee PC Touch on the CeBIT show floor

Netbook maker Asus displayed its upcoming Eee PC Touch netbooks, including a table with a swivel screen, at the CeBIT trade show more

Coders urged to take up open source in downturn

Coders urged to take up open source in downturn

The president of the Free Software Foundation Europe has called on companies and out-of-work IT professionals to use the recession as an opportunity to turn away from proprietary strategies more

Asus to phase out 7-inch Eee PC netbooks

Asus to phase out 7-inch Eee PC netbooks

Asus's chairman, who has denied that the 8.9-inch Eee PC is being dropped, has confirmed that it is abandoning the seven-inch version that launched the Eee brand more

Video icon

Video

Microsoft Futures

Windows 7: Mixed reviews from PDC attendees

As developers received their copies of Windows 7 on Tuesday, they offered varied reactions to the Microsoft operating system update More

Microsoft floats clouds on Windows Azure

At the Professional Developers Conference, Microsoft announced the Azure Services Platform, the company's cloud-computing platform More

Ozzie: Success of Azure comes down to trust

In an interview, Ray Ozzie says businesses will be taking a risk by placing core operations in Microsoft's datacentre, but that the software giant has more to lose if things go bad More


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters