BMC buys app automation tech aimed at virtual, cloud environments
- 08 January, 2010 06:46
- Comments
BMC Thursday announced it has acquired privately-held Phurnace Software in a deal that BMC says will help it deliver technology to reduce the cost and complexity of deploying Java applications into virtual and cloud environments.
BMC acquired Phurnace, for an undisclosed sum, with plans to incorporate Phurnace technology into BMC's BladeLogic Server Automation Suite. To start, BMC will sell and support the acquired products as BMC BladeLogic Application Release Automation. The software, BMC says, will automate the application deployment process to reduce the risk of errors and outages associated with manual or script-based processes. (See related story, 5 must-have IT management technologies for 2010.)
"We see the application layer as the next frontier in data center automation. Only through automation can customers drastically reduce the time it takes to deploy applications to a production environment while dramatically reducing the risks and costs of the deployment process," said Dev Ittycheria, president of enterprise service management at BMC, in a statement. "This acquisition significantly enhances our capabilities in the application layer, positions us extremely well to manage the next-generation data center and considerably strengthens BMC's business service management platform."
Phurnace, which competes with rPath in the application release automation market, offers technology to model and deploy Java Enterprise Edition applications for WebLogic, WebSphere, JBoss and WebSphere Portal. The company says its products also completely eliminate the need for scripting and provide troubleshooting and remediation capabilities. Phurnace products also automate the migration of applications from one version of an application server to another. BMC says Phurnace's Deliver products are already integrated into existing BMC BladeLogic deployments.
Industry watchers say demand is high for tools to automate the application release management process, which is among the best practices detailed by the IT Infrastructure Library, or ITIL. Release management involves moving applications from development to quality assurance and test to production environments without introducing errors. It also includes the process of adding changes to applications or updating them with the most recent version on large-scale distributions, processes that in large physical, virtual and cloud environments requires automation, analysts say.
"Release management technology is essentially software distribution tools on steroids. The software takes applications from development and test environments and moves them into operations," says Glenn O’Donnell, a senior analyst with Forrester Research. "It enables IT to decide when and to what environments to make updates or to distribute only the chunks of code that have been changed. That process used to be once every few months for many organizations, but now it is more common to happen more than once per week. Tracking and controlling that process has hit a crescendo, and we are seeing a lot of interest in the technology now."
BMC completed the Phurnace Software acquisition on the heels of two other application-related buys: MQ Software and Tideway Systems. (See related story, 10 big IT management moves in 2009.)
The MQ buy helped BMC acquire technology that would benefit customers developing service-oriented architectures, and the Tideway purchase brought BMC technology that builds a map of a company's applications and the underlying infrastructure that supports them.
The focus on application management in virtual and cloud environments could put BMC at an advantage when customers begin to experience the challenges, says Jasmine Noel, principal analyst and co-founder of research firm Ptak, Noel & Associates.
"People aren't yet screaming over virtualization and its effect on application management, it has been kind of quiet on that front, so my guess is that people are implementing the technology and then the screaming over the challenges it poses will begin by mid-2010," she says.
Do you Tweet? Follow Denise Dubie on Twitter at http://twitter.com/DDubie
This story, "BMC buys app automation tech aimed at virtual, cloud environments," was originally published at NetworkWorld.com. Follow the latest developments in infrastructure management at Network World.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Phones are distractions during catch-ups
-
Google's Sidewiki lets people post comments about Web pages
-
Best Practices for Implementing a Data Warehouse on the Oracle Exadata Database Machine
Increasingly companies are recognizing the value of an enterprise data warehouse (EDW). A true EDW provides a single 360-degree view of the business and a powerful platform for a wide spectrum of business intelligence tasks ranging from predictive analysis to near real-time strategic and tactical decision support throughout the organization. Ensuring the EDW will get the desired performance and will scale out as your data grows you need to get three fundamental things correct, the hardware configuration, the physical data model and the data loading process. Read on. -
Oracle Database 11g for Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence
Oracle Database 11g is a comprehensive database platform for data warehousing and business intelligence that combines industry-leading scalability and performance, deeply integrated analytics, and embedded integration and data-quality -- all in a single platform running on a reliable, low-cost grid infrastructure. Read on. -
Yes. We. Can. Flexible Policy 2.0
Social media may have changed the way we do business, but the rules of engagement are still the same. Dynamic business environments call for flexibility. Context is everything when it comes to deciding what information needs to be blocked or controlled, and when. Read this whitepaper.
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition
-
Teach Yourself Visually Windows 7
-
Windows 7 for Dummies® Dvd+book Bundle
-
Windows 7 for Seniors for Dummies®
-
Office 2007 for Dummies
-
Office 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
MYOB Software for Dummies 6E Australian Edition
-
Microsoft Office
-
Windows 7 for Dummies®








Comments
Post new comment