October 05, 2011, 11:26 AM — Symantec Corp. this week unveiled version 6.0 of its flagship storage management and high availability suite of products, which include upgrades designed to help users build private-cloud architectures out of existing infrastructures.
The upgraded product suite includes several key products, including Veritas Storage Foundation 6.0, Veritas Cluster Server 6.0, Veritas Operations Manager 4.1 and Symantec ApplicationHA 6.0.
Symantec said the full suite is more tightly integrated to allow business services to be run across multiple virtualization technologies, operating systems and storage platforms.
Veritas Cluster Server 6.0 and Storage Foundation HA 6.0 have also added a new tool called Virtual Business Service, which manages the availability of business services end-to-end across heterogeneous platforms, according to Don Angspatt a vice president of product management for Symantec.
The system runs on multiple platforms, including AIX, HP-UX, Solaris, Linux, Windows and VMware,
The tool lets administrators orchestrate the start, stop, non-disruptive testing, and failover of multi tier applications with a single click, resulting in resilience and mobility for the business service, Angspatt said.
"We're really trying to address a couple big pain points -- business serviceability and something we're calling elastic storage capabilities -- related to moving to the cloud," Angspatt said. "One of the things we're delivering is high availability disaster recovery for the entire business service and not just a component of that service."
Storage Foundation 6.0 adds support for file system deduplication and compression, along with reclamation of thin provisioned volumes, meaning it can reclaim any capacity not used by applications, Symantec said.
The upgraded suite also supports storage tiering, or the ability to migrate data across multiple drive types based on use patterns, and now offers dynamic resizing of volumes, meaning it can shrink or expand them based on application requirements without disruption.
Brad Cowles, senior director of IT Platform Services at construction wholesale company HD Supply, said he's been using Veritas Cluster Server (VCS) and Symantec's Veritas NetBackup software in three data centers that support of 10 lines of business and 665 branch locations.
"VCS and the replication part of it has allowed us to accomplish one of our biggest strategic objectives -- to get rid of Unix and get onto Linux, even for all our mission critical applications," Cowles said. "We haven't focused a lot on what 6.0 has to offer. We could continue to make incredible gains with the version we're on now for the next 12 months and not run out of things to do."



















