This article is more than 1 year old

The present is virtual, the future should be too

Containers are visitors from hyperscale-land. They should respect your ways when you invite them in

Register Debate Welcome to the latest Register Debate in which writers discuss technology topics, and you – the reader – choose the winning argument. The format is simple: we propose a motion, the arguments for the motion will run this Monday and Wednesday, and the arguments against on Tuesday and Thursday.

During the week you can cast your vote on which side you support using the embedded poll, choosing whether you're in favor or against the motion. The final score will be announced on Friday, revealing whether the for or against argument was most popular. It's up to our writers to convince you to vote for their side.

This week's motion is: Containers will kill virtual machines

And now, today, arguing AGAINST the motion is CHRIS MELLOR, the editor of our enterprise storage sister publication, Blocks & Files...

The history of the data centre is a long drive to efficiency. Bare metal servers waited for I/O to finish before continuing other work, so multi-tasking operating systems were invented to give servers the power to run other tasks while they waited for I/O to complete.

Multi-tasking created demand for more servers, but all too often those machines were tightly coupled to single applications and operating systems and if they weren’t busy, the server was underutilized.

Virtualisation rescued servers from that underutilization and meant organisations could run fewer but bigger physical servers and myriad virtual machines (VMs). Hypervisors could load VMs with different operating systems so that one physical server could run Windows, Unix and Linux environments simultaneously. Each VM was given the resources it needed and everything was rosy - for a while.

Kubernetes is an application like any other. It's better off virtualized.

Then came hyperscale services running on millions of servers, a situation that made it critical to extract every last cycle of server power with as little wasted or idle as possible.

VMs didn’t work well at hyperscale. Enter containers and micro-services, which have become the base execution unit for hyperscale services and recently for more mainstream software developed using the same techniques employed by hyperscale operations.

So now we have two kinds of data centres used by businesses and other organisations: VM-centric data centres and containerized data centres.

We also have two ways of producing applications.

It’s confusing and complex.

What should we do?

One option is to have public clouds convert to VM-centric operations, but that won’t happen because hyperscale operators’ resource recovery models need containers. VMs as their as the core execution unit is too wasteful of IT resources.

Another option is for the on-premises world to convert to microservices, containerize everything and run like public clouds. But the complexity and expense involved is out of proportion for non-hyperscale operations.

The third choice is to go hybrid, to combine the different on-premises and public cloud worlds under an abstraction layer that presents a unified and coherent environment to run applications.

Brilliant idea. Then the on-premises world could carry on doing what it’s doing; running virtual machines in virtualized servers; and the public clouds could carry on running containers.

One problem; where is this abstraction layer?

It already exists. It’s called virtualization – because a virtualized server can run containers.

What strange magic is this? The tools that manage containers – like Kubernetes – are an application like any other. They’re better off virtualized. Containers themselves share an operating system. Any instance of an OS is better off virtualized.

Further, we don’t need containers to have on-premises-to-public cloud application mobility.

Virtual machines are already mobile. VMware, Microsoft and all the big clouds offer VM migration tools and services.

VMware, which dominates the virtual server market, has relationships that VMs it created run in AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, Oracle Cloud and Alibaba Cloud.

Hyperscale services extracting every last cycle of server power critical

Because VMs are already mobile we don’t need to containerise our applications to enjoy multi-way mobility between public clouds and on-premises data centres. And even if you do decide to develop with containers, they need the resilience, security and manageability that virtual machines afford.

Get with the virtualised server program container purists. They’re mature, reasonable, common sense and low friction. ®

Cast your vote below. We'll close the poll on Thursday night and publish the final result on Friday. You can track the debate's progress here.

JavaScript Disabled

Please Enable JavaScript to use this feature.

More about

More about

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like