Red Hat raids cloud storage market by acquiring Gluster

By Julie Bort, Network World |  Storage, cloud storage Add a new comment

Red Hat announced Tuesday that it is acquiring Gluster, which makes open-source software that clusters commodity SATA drives and NAS systems into massively scalable pools of storage, in a cash deal valued at about $136 million. Gluster is also a contributor to the OpenStack cloud project and Red Hat is promising this involvement will continue. Indeed, Red Hat is now uncharacteristically saying its support of OpenStack will grow even beyond Gluster to the next release of Fedora.

This is the first acquisition Red Hat has made in 2011 and the deal is expected to close pretty much immediately, in October.

MORE DEALS: 2011's Top Tech M&A Transactions

Gluster, which was founded in 2005, has its R&D and engineering facility in Bangalore, India, while its leadership team resides in California. The company's flagship technology is GlusterFS, which allows an enterprise to cluster large numbers of commodity storage and compute resources into a centrally accessible and managed and storage pool. It names Pandora, Box.net and Samsung among its customers.

"100 terabytes [of unstructured data] is peanuts today. One terabyte has become a very common use case for Gluster. We used to think petabytes was big. Nowadays a few petabytes is not a big deal," Gluster's founder AB Periasamy said during the acquisition announcement webcast.

Gluster's sweet spot is in managing unstructured data and in this regard it competes with open-source project Hadoop, which has the backing of big players Google and Yahoo and has also grown in popularity in recent years. Gluster differs from Hadoop in that it has no central meta data server but is fully distributed, the company says. Applications can access the data as regular files and folders (POSIX compatible).

Red Hat is looking to Gluster to gain entry into a new market for it, storage. Research says unstructured data storage is a $4 billion market, and will grow 44 times larger by 2020, according to Brian Stevens, vice president of engineering for Red Hat. Gluster has always been based on Linux and "is already optimized to Red Hat Linux systems running on x86 systems," Stevens says, which makes it a natural fit to acquire. "In minutes, customers can install a Gluster-based service and start a scale-out pool."

Software-based storage is particularly important for companies using public clouds because for clouds, storage "has to be software. You're not going to run a hardware solution on top of Amazon's cloud," says Stevens, adding that Gluster "is not a replacement for something IT is doing," but will support new cloud-based services that IT wants to roll out.

On the other hand, Gluster postions itself as 50% cheaper than legacy hardware-based storage systems. So clearly Red Hat is looking at Gluster to compete with the likes of EMC and Hitachi.

"Gluster changed the storage market the way Linux changed the operating system market," Charlie Peter, Red Hat's CFO, said during the webcast. However, he also said that he doesn't expect Red Hat to turn a profit on subscriptions of Gluster through the rest of this fiscal year and perhaps not next year either. As a private company, Gluster's current profitability isn't known.

OpenStack enthusiast

Interestingly, just two months ago Gluster made a big contribution to OpenStack, an open source cloud platform that competes with Red Hat's own cloud initiatives. A few weeks earlier, Red Hat made waves in the open source community when one of its executives threw punches at OpenStack's community while announcing the company's own cloud management software, Aeolus, for use with Red Hat's Deltacloud.

At that time, Red Hat's general manager of cloud computing, Scott Crenshaw, was quoted as saying, "There's the OpenStack project that has a lot of people signing up, but when you talk to the people, the vast majority is the press release; a lot of people are keeping their options open."


Originally published on Network World |  Click here to read the original story.

ITworld LIVE

StorageWhite Papers & Webcasts

White Paper

Using BD for Smarter Decision Making

This paper looks at new developments in business analytics and discusses the benefits analyzing big data bring to the business.

White Paper

Protecting Against Database Attacks and Insider Threats: Top 5 Scenarios

Read this new eBook to learn the top five scenarios and essential best practices for preventing database attacks and insider threats.

White Paper

The Best Way to Build a Cloud -- HP CloudSystem Matrix and HP 3PAR Utility Storage provide solid, flexible foundation

Learn how HP CloudSystem Matrix and HP 3PAR Utility Storage provide a solid, flexible foundation for your cloud environment.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Defining Tier One Storage in the Modern Data Center

This report defines "tier-1" storage in the modern IT world and in the data centers and services that support it. What was a simple environment just a few years ago with mainframes or a few large servers to be supported has evolved into a complex web of virtual machines, clouds, and expanding user expectations -- factors which demand and create flexibility, but do so in a way that pushes a lack of predictability upon the storage infrastructure. Learn what your criteria should be for tier-1 storage.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Converged Storage: Utility Storage - The Ideal Platform for Virtual and Cloud Computing

Server virtualization has transformed corporate IT -- companies have enjoyed major cost savings and have gained flexibility and efficiency. But this has also led to a proliferation of virtual machines and servers that threaten to overwhelm data movement and storage technologies. In this IDG Tech Dossier, learn how utility storage makes for massive consolidation, flexibility and scalability, so IT departments can reduce storage infrastructure and lower costs while improving their ability to respond to fast-changing needs of business units.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question