Comments
Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Cloud Computing
Conference & Expo
November 2-4, 2009 NYC
Register Today and SAVE !..

2008 West
DIAMOND SPONSOR:
Data Direct
SOA, WOA and Cloud Computing: The New Frontier for Data Services
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Red Hat
The Opening of Virtualization
GOLD SPONSORS:
Appsense
User Environment Management – The Third Layer of the Desktop
Cordys
Cloud Computing for Business Agility
EMC
CMIS: A Multi-Vendor Proposal for a Service-Based Content Management Interoperability Standard
Freedom OSS
Practical SOA” Max Yankelevich
Intel
Architecting an Enterprise Service Router (ESR) – A Cost-Effective Way to Scale SOA Across the Enterprise
Sensedia
Return on Assests: Bringing Visibility to your SOA Strategy
Symantec
Managing Hybrid Endpoint Environments
VMWare
Game-Changing Technology for Enterprise Clouds and Applications
Click For 2008 West
Event Webcasts

2008 West
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Appcelerator
Get ‘Rich’ Quick: Rapid Prototyping for RIA with ZERO Server Code
Keynote Systems
Designing for and Managing Performance in the New Frontier of Rich Internet Applications
GOLD SPONSORS:
ICEsoft
How Can AJAX Improve Homeland Security?
Isomorphic
Beyond Widgets: What a RIA Platform Should Offer
Oracle
REAs: Rich Enterprise Applications
Click For 2008 Event Webcasts
In many cases, the end of the year gives you time to step back and take stock of the last 12 months. This is when many of us take a hard look at what worked and what did not, complete performance reviews, and formulate plans for the coming year. For me, it is all of those things plus a time when I u...
SYS-CON.TV
JavaOne - Intel is backing AMD technology. No, really, swear to God!
Virtualization: 3Leaf Aims To Make Scale-Out Scale Up

Now here's a curiosity. Intel is backing a start-up that depends on AMD technology to do what's it's doing. No, really, swear to God. In fact, Intel led the stealth outfit's $20 million B round last September, bringing total investment to $32.5 million.

Either Intel has mothballed its jackboots and suddenly turned magnanimous or these boys can talk a June bug off a ripe fig, which may be why they call themselves 3Leaf Systems.

3Leaf, which just broke cover with a box called the V-8000, fancies itself challenging Egenera, according to CEO Bob Quinn. He calls 3Leaf "the Egenera of commodity products," and he's gonna have ex-Egenera people peddling the box. Savvis, Egenera's largest customer, has been a beta site.

The V-8000, a stage one product, is a 2U virtual I/O server, which explains the "V" in its name and why 3Leaf is thinking Egenera, which wrote the book on virtualization.

The appliance, so to speak, is built around two dual-core AMD Opterons. 3Leaf exploits AMD's virtualization properties and licensed its HyperTransport technology. Heck, Quinn claims to have given AMD the idea for its Torrenza third-party co-processor scheme.

See, by the middle of next year 3Leaf expects to add a second product that virtualizes memory and processing but that will take both a piece of Torrenza-style silicon code named Aqua that plugs into an Opteron socket and another round of funding.

When 3Leaf puts the V-8000 and the Aqua thing together what should emerge is a cluster of x86 servers, possible tens of thousands of cores, functioning in unison like an SMP or NUMA machine and running multiple applications and multiple operating systems. (Before he turned serial entrepreneur Quinn worked on SMP machines at Unisys.)

But to get there, first there's the V-8000, which is supposed to do wonders for one's infrastructure-related CAPEX and OPEX, cutting the first by as much 50% and the second by as much as 60%.

3Leaf thinks it's mastered the technique for delivering mainframe-class availability and resiliency to a bunch of commodity servers by virtualizing their I/O subsystems.

Basically it consolidates them into a single scale-out resource and then partitions and repurposes them into a virtual scale-up server real-time.

It's supposed to be able to maximize the x86 servers' scalability and utilization - which let's face it is a generally pretty rotten 10%-15% - speed provisioning of new servers - it shouldn't take six-10 weeks to deploy a new service anymore - and provide high availability and centralized management, claims that can bring tears of yearning to a CIO's eyes.

3Leaf's Virtual Compute Environment (VCE) - and its interposing software layer - virtualizes the servers' networking and storage interfaces, replaces them with a single 10 Gbps fabric (Infiniband or Ethernet, no matter) and turns the servers into stateless diskless nodes connected to virtual NICs, virtual Host Bus Adapters and virtual disks.

The fewer devices the greater the cost savings in both material and labor, 3Leaf argues, and unhobbled from a specific physical server can be centrally managed. Fewer drivers should also translate into less downtime.

But the real virtue is in associating the I/O with the operating system, where it belongs, Quinn declares.

One V-8000 can virtualize 20 nodes, but 3Leaf recommends two for high availability. The two cost $100,000 but the data center then gets to virtualize cheaper servers. It won't need the usual $25k kits. And in a crisis the V-8000 is supposed to automatically discover redundant storage paths and bind together redundant networking paths.

Because the V-8000 lets servers be defined in advance, spare nodes can be provisioned in minutes and you don't have to fuss with networks and storage because their interfaces have been pre-allocated. 3Leaf says service levels can also be dynamically modified as application demand changes, which should mean improved utilization of the I/O resources, priority apps running efficiently and mainframe-class availability.

The V-8000 works with Linux, Windows, VMware ESX, Xen and Microsoft virtualization.

Besides Intel, which is waiting to be embraced once its gear goes HyperTransport-like, 3Leaf is also backed by Enterprise Partners, Storm Ventures and Alloy Ventures. Former McData CEO John Kelley is on the board.

The company has 40 full-time people, 80 with consultants and contractors, Quinn said, and no sales. It's using a rep and expects to have an OEM on board by the end of year.

Egenera marketing VP Susan Davis remembers how Egenera early on considered doing a 2,000-CPU single-image systems - it had the talent - its boys from Hitachi - but what stayed its hand was the small size of the market, complicated nowadays by multi-core chips and the competition they pose.

"It's not mainstream," she said.

"It's also harder than it looks in the customer world than in the lab," she said, thinking SAN and switch certification, and making everything work. "It's not the hardware, it's the software," she said.

Others that have gone down this path lately have stumbled. Fabric7 turned up its toes a few weeks ago and Virtual Iron abandoned its SMP aggregation plans and turned into a hypervisor peddler.

About Virtualization News
SYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

Now here's a curiosity. Intel is backing a start-up that depends on AMD technology to do what's it's doing. No, really, swear to God. In fact, Intel led the stealth outfit's $20 million B round last September, bringing total investment to $32.5 million. Either Intel has mothballed its jackboots and suddenly turned magnanimous or these boys can talk a June bug off a ripe fig, which may be why they call themselves 3Leaf Systems.


Your Feedback
Virtualization News wrote: Now here's a curiosity. Intel is backing a start-up that depends on AMD technology to do what's it's doing. No, really, swear to God. In fact, Intel led the stealth outfit's $20 million B round last September, bringing total investment to $32.5 million. Either Intel has mothballed its jackboots and suddenly turned magnanimous or these boys can talk a June bug off a ripe fig, which may be why they call themselves 3Leaf Systems.
SOA World Latest Stories
Cloud is a shift from the focus on underlying technology implementation to leveraging existing implementations and further building upon them. Cloud orchestration or a network of clouds is the wave of the future where these clouds can operate with elasticity, scalability, and efficienc...
In Aug 2011, around 72 million people accessed social networking sites from mobile, increase of 37% from previous year (study by ComScore) and nearly 50% (of 72 million) access networking sites almost every day. Devising a cohesive strategy for addressing both mobility and social medi...
Citrix has opened up a beta of its CloudStack 3, the first release of the open source cloud platform under the Citrix brand. Citrix acquired the Java-based cloud management last year when it bought Cloud.com. A full production version of the branded stuff is supposed to be available ...
EMC and VMware are going into the cloud business with Atos, the big, publicly owned, Paris-based global IT services firm, intending to take an equity position in Canopy, an end-to-end cloud company Atos is setting up using EMC and VMware technology. The companies said Wednesday when ...
A Munich court Thursday found Motorola Mobility guilty of infringing an Apple patent and handed Apple a permanent injunction against two Android smartphones. Apple can enforce the injunction after posting a bond lest MMI succeed in invalidating the slide-to-unlock patent (EP1964022) ...
In a surprise move on Tuesday, January 10, Oracle wheeled out its Big Data Appliance. That’s the one it said in October would be ready sometime in the first half. Only nobody believed it meant early in the first half. Heck, it’s not even clear anybody thought Oracle could make the fi...
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice:
Google Reader or Homepage Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe in NewsGator Online
myFeedster Add to My AOL Subscribe in Rojo Add 'Hugg' to Newsburst from CNET News.com Kinja Digest View Additional SYS-CON Feeds
Publish Your Article! Please send it to editorial(at)sys-con.com!

Advertise on this site! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com! 201 802-3021


SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
ADS BY GOOGLE