Most of my days are spent talking to customers about network automation, application segmentation, and how to transition to a multicloud world. The vast majority of those customers have both Cisco and VMware products and solutions in their environments. Recently, we've seen an uptick in confusing information about how Cisco ACI integrates with VMware. With that in mind, I'd like to set the record straight about the four most common technical questions our customers ask us to clarify.
It should come as no surprise that VMware doesn't support Cisco products, just as Cisco doesn't support VMware products from a professional services and maintenance standpoint. That's just how the IT industry works. For example, at Cisco, our IT team uses Cisco's ACI VMM integration with VMware vSphere in Cisco's data centers. Even in this environment, VMware provides support for its products deployed in the Cisco data center.
Customers should, however, hold vendors accountable for supporting their own public API's.
Furthermore, a common question I get from customers stems from the fact there are 2 different modes in which customers can use Cisco ACI and VMware's solutions -1) ACI VMM and 2) Cisco AVE. The method of how/where we integrate is different across both:
ACI is all about a policy abstraction layer that allows customers to define application network intent once -from connectivity to segmentation and service chains -then to automatically and dynamically configure networks as needed, whether these networks are hardware-based, software-based, or even cloud API based.
Cisco introduced the concept ofintent based networkingback in 2013 with the launch of ACI.
In 2013, most of our customers were focused on automating their own data centers. Hence, Cisco first delivered a solution for physical and virtual networks. The choice of an integrated approach was driven by customers' need for single point of management, simplicity, full visibility, performance, and low cost.
As multicloud gains momentum, it's clear our vision aligns to the direction of the market and the needs of our customers.
According to Canalys, Cisco has the largest enterprise security business in the world. We know security. From the application to the data center to the edge.
Here are a few home truths to keep in mind when discussing data, user and application security:
The laws of physics apply to every medium. All infrastructure vendors (network, compute, storage) publish scale and hardware requirements documents and update those when releasing a new software images. Modern Data Center designs are based on a scale-out principle to enable customers to add capacity as needed without impacting existing workloads. In addition, the last few years have seen a rapid innovation cycle on both the compute (CPU) and network (switch silicon) side providing customers additional choice when adding capacity.
My intent with this blog is to set the record straight to focus on what we do best -provide advice and solve customer problems. We hope this helps address some of the confusion and inaccuracies floating around.
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