Holes in VMware without Storage Foundation

Most features in Storage Foundation are supported in a VMware environment, but let’s focus on the features that work differently in VMware environment and why certain features are not supported. Storage consumed by a virtual machine can be allocated directly over the virtual machine network interface (NFS, CIFS, iSCSI protocols), by passing the virtualization layer, and is therefore not affected by virtualization. VMware certification mark means that Version 4.1 and 5.0 of VERITAS Storage Foundation has been certified to run in a VMware Virtual Machine environment.   VMware server virtualization is a technology that has significant benefits for a data center environment and it is changing the architecture of data.  However, while it is great at virtualizing/portioning system instances, it does not solve or address storage virtualization. VMware has simplistic storage functionality that successfully addresses the current VMware market however as more storage intensive applications are being deployed in a virtual environments; true storage management technology is required. Deploying Storage Foundation in a VMware environment makes storage easier to manage and use by creating a functional storage management layer that the storage administrator or system administrator can access and use as it is not hidden inside the VMware ESX server. Deploying Storage Foundation in a VMware environment ensures predictable performance. Deploying Storage Foundation in a VMware environment ensures intrusive operations such as array migration and data migration can cause significant downtime for a lag amount of servers, especially in a virtual environment where one physical server is hosting as many as 30 virtual servers.  Storage Foundation delivers on these items as well as numerous other functions that help the data center more efficiently. Using Storage Foundation in a VMware environment means that Storage Foundation is running in the operating system, inside the Virtual Machine.  Storage Foundation does not run inside the VMware ESX kernel or in the Hypervisor.