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There is a growing trend in the enterprise environment to move away from classic virtualisation platforms to more flexible Kubernetes-native solutions. Hitachi Vantara and Red Hat are meeting these expectations by presenting an integrated solution that combines the functionality of Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization with the Hitachi Vantara VSP One platform. The aim: to simplify the migration of existing virtual machines and consolidate infrastructure into a single, hybrid environment.
The new stack allows virtual machines (VMs) and containers to run side-by-side, avoiding duplication of infrastructure and reducing the cost of licences for both layers. At the heart of it lies the integration of components:
This configuration allows companies to more easily move out of VMware (or other classic hypervisor) ecosystems and build a cloud platform based on Kubernetes and OpenShift. In practice, Hitachi is targeting this offering at organisations 'off VMware migrators’.
Several trends support the pace of adoption:
1. escalating licensing costs – according to the release, 73% of companies have undergone a licensing audit and more than 1/3 indicate licensing compliance as a major issue.
2. increasing requirements for workload mobility – businesses want to move components between locations and the cloud with minimal downtime.
3 Pressure to consolidate infrastructure – instead of maintaining two stacks (VM + containers), a homogeneous, consistent environment is desirable.
4 There is a growing market for open source virtualisation solutions in Kubernetes, not least thanks to KubeVirt as the OpenShift Virtualisation engine.
Alior Bank, which operates in Poland, has been identified as an early adopter of the integration. The bank decided to migrate to the Red Hat OpenShift Virtualisation platform using VSP One, in response to increased licensing costs and limitations on the flexibility of its existing environment. In its context, a key motivation was the desire for a 'future-ready’, resilient and scalable infrastructure.
The new solution brings significant benefits: the ability to consolidate VMs and containers, reduced licensing costs, simplified migration and increased resilience in distributed environments. However, challenges remain: