SuSE Going For Red Hat's Market
IAEBG writes "SuSE Linux has enlisted the backing of server-software maker Veritas, an important step in supporting the needs of business computing and keeping up with top Linux seller Red Hat.
Check out the article on News.com." Interesting step - now to see how it all pans out.
I'm pretty sure SuSE and Red-Hat were already in the same market.
However, being a Sun guy myself, I worry if this is this one more blow against Sun's unstable current position.
Davak
I remember that Veritas was one of the few companies that licensed MS filesystem and protocols. In fact, after Seagate, I think Veritas took over Backup Exec and the XP backup s/w.
Now, what advantage does tying up with Veritas give a Linux distro firm? Backups? That should be a very minor market segment, even among Corporate users.
Methinks, there's something sly going on over here.
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
Incidentally, Linuxworld Frankfurt is colocated with the European Banking World expo and conference. A ticket for one gets you into to the other. The Bankfest, is for serious PHBs and Linuxworld is offering a day on Linux in finance to attract "Cross-interest".
In other news, Sun's shares (SUNW) were slighlty down. Having Veritas supporting both RH and Suse isn't good news for them.
See my journal, I write things there
Aside from this, Red Hat and Suse are competitors. Of course Suse is going for Red Hat's market and you can rest assured that Red Hat is trying very hard to react in kind.
Maybe someone should change the headline to "Suse signs a deal with Veritas"?
Cooper
--
I don't need a pass to pass this pass!
- Groo The Wanderer -
What's really going to matter to businesses is support. With Red Hat, they know they're getting a trusted support contract. That's the primary reason most businesses choose Red Hat.
All I can say is: it's about time.
I'm currently going through the pain of doing a Veritas
install on RH Server, and let me tell you I have some
*serious* reservations about this product. It is quite clear
that the Veritas stuff is not designed well at all. As much as
I'm a RH bigot, I'll drop them in a minute if this stuff runs
well on SuSE.
For example, in trying to bring up the Veritas stuff for what
will be a NAS head, Veritas requires two primary
partitions! Extended just won't work. Hello? This is an
incredibly basic and fundamental screwup, and it is simple
to fix. What did they do - ship the engineering off to India?
Then there are other issues to consider. Most notably NFS
performance. NFS on Linux just sucks in comparison to
Solaris. It is way too slow, and yes, I've done the various tuning bits. It looks like we'll have to dig into the source to
fix this; assuming we just don't drop RH altogether and go
back to Solaris.
So I'm very pleased to see Veritas and SuSE team up. If
only RH would join in. Perhaps something will be working
sufficiently for a real IT department in about a year. It sure
isn't there now.
Where I work, we've had some rather unpleasant experiences with Veritas. I'm not the sysadmin, so I don't have all the details. In any event, we had a hardware failure, resulting in the need for a full restore from tape. Here are some of the problems we encountered with Veritas:
- The documentation doesn't tell you this, but if you choose to have quick backups, then you get very slow restores.
- Our restore rate was about 1 megabyte per second.
- Veritas would crash after restoring only a few gigabytes, requiring us to restart where we left off, only for it to crash again after a few gigabytes. This resulted in a few gaps in the restore.
- Veritas uses some proprietary format on tape, making it impossible for us to get at the data some other way so that we could write scripts to check what was restored and what was not.
- Veritas support is prohibitively expensive.
- We were down for a week because of this horrible software.
As a real sysadmin (I don't play one on TV, I do the real thing), let me just say that this is most definitely a Good Thing (tm) for SuSE.
There's no way, no how that they could write a volume manager or filesystem product that's even in the same league with VxFS and VxVM.
The clustering product is also very, very robust. It's a simple, clean design, yet very powerful if you know how to take advantage of it. A welcome breath of fresh air after Sun Cluster 2.x and even 3.x (What dogs!)
Does anyone else here know what Foundation Suite is? It provides a full volume management solution; no, this isn't so you can "mount your wind00z mp3z" or stuff like that. This is for real volume management, real disk replacement, real mirroring/striping/etc.
And VxFS is probably the most kick-ass filesystem I've ever used. The journaling alone is just fantastic, and the speed.... damn, it's fast. Even better, using Quick I/O....
Good for SuSE! About damned time Linux gained "real" volume management, filesystems & clustering.
Real businesses trust their data to real companies. Veritas is one of 'em.
It seems to me that a little more competition for RedHat in the server market is a good thing. The stronger (in the form of backing by large compagnies)the competition, the stronger the perception that Linux in the server room is a viable option.
Remember that SuSe is connected to the German goal of designing a groupware server for large work-groups. Seems SuSe is making quite a line-up of products for in the basement of large compagnies.
Why are other peoples sig's always more witty ???
Veritas can't even keep up the arrangements it already has. Where's the Netbackup client for Red Hat Linux 9? What's that? Out this summer sometime, huh? Okay.
Cool. Maybe they can use Georgy Russell as their new spokesperson. I understand she works for Veritas (according to the page).
You can accomplish anything you set your mind to. The impossible just takes a little longer.
now to see how it all pans out.
Excrutiatingly boringly.
Do Suse and Redhat really need to compete with each other? Fighting Microsoft is bad enough, do they need to fight each other too? I think a better business strategy would be to work together and increase their power.
Outdoor digital photography, mostly in New Engl
After reviewing SUSE 9.0 I'd have to say that they have a long way to go before they can get Red Hat's market. There was no support in SUSE for my SyncMaster which meant the best I could get was 1280x1024 resolution instead of my normal 1600x1024.
SUSE and Red Hat need to support more hardware, especially name brand products.
It's a highly competitive market after all, Mandrake has just carved out a big slice of LG's market, for example.
I'd rather have a monopoly based on OS/FS rather than proprietary, commercial software. At least with the OS/FS you can do Anything you want with the software.
Outdoor digital photography, mostly in New Engl
As a former employee of SuSE I'm actually delighted to hear that SuSE has managed to partner with one of the upper league software companies besides Oracle and SAP. This is good for both SuSE and Linux in general, at least here in europe.
In Korea, all your base are Only For Old People
I'm looking forward to SuSE using some of Veritas' brilliant marketing.
No, you can't use the older version on that OS, you'll need to upgrade to the version that costs 10x more.
Veritas lost all respect when they shoved a new version of Backup Exec down my throat. Version 7 refused to run on Windows 2000. It even had checks built into the installer to make sure you wouldn't run it on Windows 2000. It had more checks to make sure you couldn't fake the OS version to bypass the check.
Guess what, after hours of tinkering, it ran, and worked. All this, just to do a remote backup of a few important shares.
I've been using Veritas in my shop for over 6 years, and I have to say, the Foundation suite is a great product. However, the pricetag has been going through the roof over the past 3 years. The core prices are going up, and they keep seperating out components and then selling them as "add-ons".
Veritas NetBackup still isn't a great system, it's miles behind what OmniBack II from HP does, unfortunately HP Never ported the Cell Server to anything besides HP.
While it might not be so bad if I spend $40,000 on a Filesystem when I spent $1.5Mil on the server, I don't think someone spending $50,000 for a server will want to spend $20,000 on the VM & FS.
This sig is the express property of someone.
I think that there's a danger in any particular distribution of linux gaining too much market, particularly the more commercial ones. Commercial-driver-development has been quite telling in the area of distro-preference, with RedHat (and actually, quite often SuSe already) being the common distros supported by hardware vendors?
What does that mean to me? A lot of hardware comes touted as "supports linux," but when you really get down to it and read the accompanying docs, it means "supports RedHat" or "supports SuSe" and not any others without large amount of hassle. Because of this, it just gets harder for other distros to gain power or popularity in the market, because of the old cycle (and where have we heard this before): users won't use it 'cause it doesn't work (well/easily) on their hardware. Vendors won't fully support it until the user-base increases.
I'd like to see SuSe trim the edges off RedHat a bit, and hopefully some of the distros catch up as well (Debian, or debian-based such as knoppix/morphix). If there were at least a few more major players in the linux market, perhaps we might see more source or at least non-packager-specific (RPM) drivers/etc.
and SuSE isn't.
C'mon, charging Itanic prices for Red Hat Enterprise for x86-64 and having NO x86-64 support in Fedora Core? What is Red Hat thinking?
SuSE, OTOH, supports the x86-64 chips (AMD Opteron, Athlon 64) much more broadly. As does Mandrake.
Maybe when Red Hat sees users jumping ship to other Linux distros they'll get in gear.
Redhat GPL's their stuff. I can go to dozens of companies and buy cheap copies of Redhat, with only the name changed since Redhat does protect their name. Can't do that with SuSE.
It is quite clear that the Veritas stuff is not designed well at all.
My condolences... you are just now discovering that which the rest of us Veritas "victims" have known about for years. I've been fighting with their slapped-together-hastily products for three-quarters of decade and as soon as my boss retires, and I move up to a decision-making position, my first goal is to end our dependence on their support-intensive malware.
In mother Russia we only use Mandrake.
;)
Not only is good fruit, is great distro!
Couldn't resist
You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
Just to be 100% clear -- AMD *paid* SuSE for the AMD64 support.
And, yes, RedHat was heavily funded by Intel in the early days, so perhaps they aren't as AMD-friendly.
Furthermore, as of right now, there's only 1 Opteron box on the market from a major OEM -- a rack server from IBM. There's simply no point in enterprise support if there's no enterprise hardware out there.
Ya got that straight, pad're .... there's nobody working the home_lusr market , but rabid, drooling Debiolian and Slackmolian straydogs. HA! Nothing like the smell of paws in shiny, JackBoot leather, eh pad'res ....? Looks like da-TUX has not been berry-bery-good ta me.
So far, SuSE Enterprise 8.0 is the only Linux version, and actually the only open source product, to have ever undergo Common Criteria evaluation. Currently SuSE holds and EAL 2+, and SuSE and IBM are planning on getting that level up to 3 or 4 (can't remember exactly).
Common Criteria evaluation may seem useless to a lot of people here, and those people have a point, up to a certain extent, but a lot of decision makers want to see a certain EAL, and in some organisations, a certain EAL is mandatory.
So SuSE might actually have quite a nice position... since it is a non-US product, there are farr less problems with encryption as well, which is always nice, even now the US governement has lifted export restrictions.
I don't understand all these diferent Linux distributions. If we want to stand up to Microsoft Linux developers must unite not compete! I don't see any reason why the most important features of every distro can be implemented into one ultimate OS of the Universe which can rule the world. Look... honestly, the only reason I see that people use other distros is for the petty differences. All WIndows users have to put up with it's crap. I think we should be forced to tolerate a unified Linux distro. It's hardly anything anyways compared to the garbage people have to put up with in Windows. So, if you can put your pettiness aside and realize that we need to take out Microsoft with a unified Linux distro then maybe Linux has a change in hell. It's unbelievable how everyone is going nuts over the Loghorn screenshots too. What a joke.
I'm not anti-microsoft. I'm anti-bullshit. Which means I'm anti-microsoft.
I've just recently started looking into LVM and I'm curious as to what it's lacking, if anything, compared to similar solutions by from Vertias. Can someone with experience with both products please be kind enough to throw up a couple points detailing when you should use LVM and when you shouldn't?
Veritas continues to gain enterprise marketshare.
In an attempt to increase it's marketshare, Veritas software has moved ahead of it's competitors again by committing itself to Linux. Veritas, a well known enterprise backup and storage management company already has had a foothold in enterprise Linux server environments with it's backup agents. This move is seen as a definite commitment to "Linux in the enterprise" as a total backup solution.