 All right can everyone hear me? Is that good? Okay. I'm a little overwhelmed by the turnout. This is fantastic I think hopefully it's a testament to the the amount of interest about OpenStack and VMware. I think even six months ago the world was a very different place in Hong Kong You know there's probably a fifth or a sixth of the number of people that are here today so Sounds kind of like Southwest Airlines But I know you have a choice in which sessions you attend and I appreciate you know that you attended this one This is actually the first in a In a whole kind of set of VMware and OpenStack sessions that'll be in this room this afternoon So at the end of this session, I'll show you kind of a whole card of what's coming next In this session, this is the goal This is intended to be kind of the overview session if you're new to OpenStack and VMware You've you know probably read that oh is OpenStack competing with VMware. What you know How does that relationship work? So the first one to take people through kind of VMware's general philosophy of Open how they view OpenStack and why we think that they can fit together Well then go through some of the details of the integration. What are the pieces and how do they fit together? Well then here from from two of our customers that we've been working with with OpenStack on VMware Intel and Wells Fargo. I'll just talk briefly about their experiences and then I'll give access to a couple of resources about how to learn more that you can do on your own and just you know the next 40 minute session after this will actually be a Full 40 minutes of technical deep dive live demo So if you want to see me look bad, if I don't do it in this 40 minutes, I certainly will in the next one All right, so And I think this is this is this is the starting point of many of my discussions with with customers who've you know read articles or talked to talk to people and they have this impression that Kind of you can go down the route and go to OpenStack You can go down the route and do VMware and kind of it's a decision. It's a fork in the road You have to make a decision now and you can never you can never you know Bring them together have have both together. And so if you take one thing away from this talk It's that you know this view of the world is Definitely the wrong view to have and if you're interested in in putting the two together There's actually a really neat story that we've found working with our customers on OpenStack And really what it is is we find there's a lot of customers Who are very excited about OpenStack as an industry-wide kind of set of cloud API's and tools and a vendor independent? Framework for their developers to be able to build cloud applications on top of their decoupled from the underlying infrastructure But at the same time they they believe that VMware builds really great compute network Storage and management Technologies and they want to continue to run their data center with those technologies that they in many times already know how to operate today so you know this is the high-level value that I'd like to take you through and You know well, I'll be talking obviously a lot about why why VMware views OpenStack as an opportunity I actually do think that that the work that VMware is doing with OpenStack is actually an opportunity for the community as a whole Because if you look at you know, I've been part of OpenStack since since the very beginning We've kind of always been this push to get further into the enterprise and to go more mainstream in terms of customers And I think having a great story around OpenStack and VMware and how that fits with existing enterprise Investments and expertise is really something that can help OpenStack kind of get over the hump and and take it to the next level So, you know taking one step back Why do people have this impression that there's a fork in the road between OpenStack and VMware? And I would actually argue that it it comes down in fact There's kind of a fundamental misunderstanding of what's really interesting about OpenStack You know if you kind of read a lot of articles or something you probably think it's free right and it is free in the sense of yes, you can go download the bits and And and play around with them or build a big team to do something with it But at the end of the day and building a cloud is never free, right? It's a really hard really complicated task And so really what's powerful about OpenStack is not that it's going to cost you nothing Is that it gives you a lot of freedom and power of choice? What do I mean by that? Well first off it gives you freedom in terms of the set of underlying virtualization technologies that that you're going to use cross-compute network and storage And then it also and this is maybe a more subtle point, but I think it's equally as important It gives you a lot of choice in terms of your deployment model So if you're a big company and you view cloud is absolutely critical And you need to be in the guts and fixing bugs yourself you can do that Right or if you want someone who want if you're someone who wants to consume a product That's been packaged and polished and put together you can do that and the point is that You can do all of this with the same set of APIs That are enabling your developers to automate the provisioning of their applications So you've effectively decoupled those underlying Deployment and infrastructure decisions from the interfaces your API your from the API's your developers work with so in the future If your your developers end up moving to a public cloud, right? They'll have an experience that it's at least very similar to the experience they've had inside their own data center What's that music? I'll close the door So anyway, I'll just I'll speak up either that or I'll have to start dancing one of the two And I'm a terrible dancer. So let's let's hope someone finds a way to close that door. So You know to go into more detail about the choice of technology, you know Our fundamental view is that open stacks of framework So if you know if you spend as much time in the code as I have you'll you'll know that you know It's there's basically a set of generic API code in each project And then there's a set of drivers so I can pick what drivers I want to enable for compute for network for storage And then I'm gonna have to make some decisions about what tools I use to manage those and You know ultimately you as someone who's building a cloud cloud architecture a cloud administrator You have to say well what choice of technologies in those underlying buckets are going to you know Let me meet my needs for an open-stat cloud, you know What features and capabilities to my developers need right what kind of cost structure am I looking for what kind of scale Am I hitting how am I you know what type of reliability am I trying to achieve? How do I perform monitoring? How do I guarantee that I'm hitting my SLAs? How do I troubleshoot when someone calls for a problem? So I think often often the the open-stack choice is kind of boiled down to something that you know Or you're gonna do it on KVM. We're gonna do it on another hypervisor But really the reality is that you have to think very broadly About about the technology decisions you make and make the decision. That's right for your company So, you know from VMware's perspective, we think that you know, there's a really compelling story about enabling customer choice You know embracing the fact that yeah, some customers are gonna want to run KVM as well as vSphere and we think that's fine Right that that's right for the customer. We want to make sure that we can enable that and You know, and we've always been a company that's backed and really believed in in standard API We're a big, you know trying to trying to standardize, you know OVA disc formats, etc The work we've done in cloud foundry around paths, right? So we believe in the notion of that that if there is a standard cloud API That will mean people can adopt People can adopt cloud faster and that that's a very good thing for us So essentially what we're trying to do is is is do an open-stack integration that gives you that retains all these benefits of open-stack All right, but let's use them with the innovation and reliability that you know from VMware software and The important thing to understand here is that there's no there's not just one way to to leverage VMware within an open-stack, right? You could for example choose we've got customers who simply choose our VMware Anisex network virtualization solution This is the former NYSERA technology and they run an open-stack cloud with KVM and no other VMware in there. That's great Right, that's customer choice. We're enabling it where we provide value our customers can can use it All right, maybe they have a mix of vSphere KVM and Anisex, right? Or maybe they're a full full VMware customer and they want a really well-integrated solution Then they could have you know VMware across the board underneath so again For VMware open-stack is all about enabling customer choice making sure you have the flexibility to build the infrastructure and You know build the cloud infrastructure that that you need So really when it comes down to our philosophy, it's it's pretty simple You know our philosophy is to contribute which means participating in the open-stack community Integrating our products and just improving open-stack stability and functionality in general to make sure our customers can succeed with it Second right we work with the open-stack ecosystem. We'll talk about our partners in a little bit So to make sure customers have a lot of options in terms of how they want to deploy open-stack All right make sure that it's as easy as to deploy open-stack on VMware as it is to deploy open-stack on any other platform And then finally like every other you know vendor that participates in in open-stack Right we're gonna we're gonna put forward an argument about why we think you know We're the right partner for you to choose when building your open-stack cloud We'll talk about how VMware technology lets you build a really great open-stack cloud So what I'm going to do for the for the next probably 15 minutes is to kind of dive into each one of these in a little more detail So first off contribute So very quick pre-history. I came from the NYSERA team I was actually the project team lead for for what used to be called quantum and is now a neutron for several years So VMware's history of open-stack engagement actually goes back to the NYSERA team Who was building the open v-switch project even before open-stack was announced as was part of open-stack before it was publicly announced We were at that first Austin summit and We helped create and as I mentioned led the open-stack networking project for years Then in in mid 2012 NYSERA was acquired by VMware and that really was kind of the the point at which VMware's attitude toward open-stack started to shift and it was much more of a VMware believing in that kind of better together embrace story and so in late 2012 or You know VMware officially joined the open-stack foundation as a gold member And I don't know if any of you remember the news but at the time this was a borderline scandalous thing I think there were people who voted against us and said we were gonna Try to destroy the community and all this So the good news is I think as you'll see we've been contributing in a very positive way We've we've basically during that announcement or at the grizzly summit pretty pretty quickly after that We you know we publicly committed to say all VMware technologies are gonna integrate with open-stack And a lot of people thought we weren't gonna do it and as you'll see I think in this session in the next one We've really taken that on and and taken that very seriously as a commitment so If you think about what VMware is doing right we're kind of getting involved in open-stack and expanding our scope with with each release so back in the grizzly release we basically had neutron networking integration and That was the first release where vSphere was supported in Nova And then in Havana release we continued to iterate and improve those those networking compute integrations But also introduced a Cinder volume driver And we'll go into more details on each one of these integrations in a minute And then in the most recent ice house release we've even further expanded our engagement with the project We're now contributing heavily to the Glantz project and to we've started integrating vSphere with salameter as well So as you can tell right this is a continuing trend of VMware getting more and more involved Not just in the old projects that we were involved in from an Isera perspective But across the board and making sure that again for us It's all about if one of our customers wants to use open-stack They should have a great experience using it on top of VMware technologies So, um, you know Numbers can be can be deceptive or whatever so don't don't you know my goal here is not to not to pull rankings and all of that But I think I always like to show this slide because it's a good counteract to to the set of people who said VMware Wasn't actually going to contribute to open-stack wasn't going to participate wasn't going to integrate their products And the last game rice house release we had 24 different developers who you know worked with the community to get 515 different patches in and not only did we you know work with the community to get our patches reviewed But we reviewed over 4,000 other community patches of other people's code to make sure that again the overall quality of the project remained high So this is kind of a schematic of the projects that we contribute to ice house for VMware is kind of a Water should release in the sense of it was the first first release where our overall contributions to non Networking projects actually outweighed the contributions to the networking project So again, it shows that we're we're broadly engaging with the open-stack community the size of the of the project name up there Corresponds roughly to the number of commits we have in those projects and You know again rankings are rankings and they can be deceptive But if you look at the core integrated open-stack projects on VMware action ice house was the number four contributor All right, so there's there was red hat IBM rack space and then VMware So, you know, I think it's anyone who's kind of got their ear to the ground is looking at how we're really engaging the community Really has a sense that we're taking open-stack very seriously at VMware So the second part of this is okay great the code the code's upstream, but how do customers get it? so, you know like I mentioned one of the key things about open-stack is customer choice in terms of deployment options and and You know, there's a whole spectrum of how how how open-stack can be consumed and VMware wants to play in all all across that spectrum Right, so we have a we have a set of customers who download the open-stack source code themselves and use you know use it on top of VMware technologies and You know, that's the infinitely flexible, but pretty complex got to build your own team of developers Model and then on the far end of the spectrum there are people building, you know full integrated products that are tightly tightly bound to to VMware technology and Somewhere in the middle are kind of your standard open-stack distros that we're working very closely with to To make sure that those distros are validated on top of VMware technology in particular Here's a set of officially announced distro partners for VMware So canonical has been working with us for a very long time They were the first ones to integrate their juju charms with vSphere and NSX As you saw they're recently announced landscape installer also supports both vSphere and NSX So we continue to be very happy with our partnership with canonical. Suza also announced that Suza cloud 3 Suza cloud 2 supported vSphere and Suza cloud 3 now supports vSphere and NSX. So we're very excited about that Marantis We recently did a great webinar with them where we reviewed and gave a demo about how Marantis fuel now supports vSphere and NSX And this one's actually fairly new and not some people haven't heard it But Red Hat has recently publicly stated that they are going to in Red Hat. I think it's Ross 5 Officially support vSphere and NSX. So I think You know, this is this is another example of how you know a VMware is embracing customer choice And I think it's also a statement that you know as these companies move into the enterprise You know enterprises are coming back to them and saying supporting supporting our VMware infrastructure with an open stack is important to us So that's that's obviously very exciting for us If you're interested in learning more and actually seeing how these different integrations work We're actually taking one of our sessions and having our having these four distro partners give kind of little lightning talks About how their Deployment technologies and their installers and their their tools work really well with open stack on vSphere and NSX So that will be in this room around three three thirty to four ten today And then I also want to call a couple other really key partners HP and IBM We've been working very closely with them upstream They've been doing work to make sure that the vSphere and other VMware drivers are high quality as well So and the last part is around differentiating right? How how is it that? You know we can make an argument about why the best way to run open stack is to run it on top of VMware and You know this goes back to what what we talked about earlier right which open stacks of framework the quality of the cloud you get is going to depend on the components you put into it and VMware's goal as I mentioned is to basically say we've got a bunch of great data center Software technology compute network storage management and we want to make sure all of that fits into open stack in a way That really provides customer value so Here's the high-level schematic of of the touch points between Open stack and VMware and what you'll notice is right? We're supporting all of the standard tools northbound so what your developers see as all the standard tools But we're not cramming in all these extensions and proprietary stuff or whatever right our goal is to have standard open stack northbound And then in terms of Nova Neutron Cinder and Glantz we have integrations that You know Nova can call out to vCenter Neutron can call the VMware NSX Cinder and Glantz can also take advantage of any third-party storage that's integrated with vSphere already And then we have a set of Operations tools that are that are that also help you run an open stack deploy So I've got a couple slides here that are deep dives on each one of these But I'm actually going to go through them quite quickly because I want to egg it to the customers Which is the most interesting part and B. We have an entire kind of deep dive session next that that will That will be able to kind of go in deep deep in terms of each of these integrations So first off around Nova just very quickly. I think probably the biggest question we get around Nova is When it Nova integrates with with vCenter Do I still get to use things like the motion ha drs? Etc the answer is yes, and we've been very careful about how we integrate with with Nova to make sure that all of those kind of capabilities that you know and love from the vSphere platform are retained When you when you integrate with with open stack and the other key thing to understand from from vSphere perspective is that That because you're building on such a very solid foundation of vSphere with all the operational capabilities in it It actually can really greatly simplify your overall process for adopting open stack And so that's something we see it that people are finding very compelling in terms of built on when they're when they're making Their decision around how they might deploy open stack going forward. So again, you can kind of read this in the background I'm not going to go through each bullet point So on the NSX side, you know network virtualization is still something that's relatively new I think it's I think it's very fair to say that the VMware is seen the VMware NSX technology Seen as the leading network virtualization solution within open stack. We've been in production Open stack installs for a well over two years at this point And the really cool thing is it lets you implement a lot of rich network functionality. It lets users request networks and routers just like they request VMs, but in a way that's completely independent of the underlying physical hardware in your network And we're obviously this is actually a capability that works across not just ESX, but also KVM and Zen server So even if you have a heterogeneous cloud, it provides a lot of value there Cinder and glance this is an area. We'll do a big deep dive on in the next session But the the short short summary is that any storage that works with vSphere whether it's NFS fiverr channel is because he If it's been plugged and validated with vSphere, which is most almost every storage provider It will automatically work in your open stack environment. No need for a separate driver from that vendor No need for the to worry about the fact that that driver probably hasn't been tested very well Right, you can leverage all of that integration with vSphere And then a new technology that that that's really compelling particularly within these open stack scenarios is something called VM Or virtual sand and it actually takes the disks and SSDs that are in the hypervisors themselves and creates a virtual sand So that you actually don't have to have a physical sand But it provides a lot of the same benefits in terms of supporting high availability and V motion and in all that So in the demo in the next session, we'll actually be everything will be We'll we'll include a cluster that has a has vSan and we'll highlight that in the demo So and then finally around management technologies I think people at this point are pretty aware that that a lot of the difficulty in terms of implementing and actually be going from Oh, I installed open stack to I'm successfully running an open stack cloud is around management and So our goal here is really to make sure that that that our customers have the management tools that they need to be successful With open stack clouds, so there's two big areas that that we focus on actually I'll go back to this one So there's something called vCloud Automation Center, which That that's more of a you can use it to deploy applications kind of a higher level service that actually works Between different clouds so it can talk directly to vSphere. I can talk to open stack It can actually talk to AWS as well, but it lets you perform higher level policy management on top of open stack and then Something I that will really hit in the demo next is the infrastructure management, right? How do I troubleshoot? How do I do capacity planning? What happens when a tenant calls up and says, oh, I think the clouds down or oh, I hit this this VM instances in error state What do you do there? You know basically trying to figure out which host SSH into and Crepping through logs is not not not a great management strategy So we're building tools both vCenter operations management and logins that we're building specific open stack awareness into those tools And we'll highlight that in the next demo So anyway without further ado, I'm going to hand it off to Glenn Ferguson and Ty workman We're going to talk a little bit about the work. We've been doing with Wells Fargo on open stack in VMR Working so that is yeah, thanks. Oh, well, thank you Dan for that So we are using VMware for our open stack deployment and the reason I'm up here is When I came into Wells Fargo probably about eight months ago I thought I was a purest open source came from Netflix like that was my story. Are you on the mic? I'm gonna say there's a gas to be kind of close. Yeah, okay Sorry about that. So, you know, I was kind of a purest thought I was and I came to this enterprise environment and VMware was everywhere I'm like, okay, you know, we'll give it a shot. I am so happy that that is the scenario not only do we leverage vSphere for Customer instances that are spun up through open stack We also use it to host our open stack components because of the vMotion and the HA we get an extra level of resiliency built into it You know, if there's an underlying hardware failure in the infrastructure VMware just takes care of that moves it to the next one in the cluster. So that extra Resiliency we get with open stack controller nodes themselves, but also the instances that customers run in our cloud We get that resiliency I think Dan made several good points about as a cloud operator the challenges are interesting, especially around capacity management and troubleshooting You have to understand when you have to bring in your next rack of servers or next node So you have to have that below the line visibility And so the tool sets that they're there that, you know, we could leverage immediately out of the box is tremendously valuable And there's actually a slide. I think that you have in here around the actual collaboration on open stack itself For those of you that have or have not deployed open stack, there will be bumps in the road You know, you'll figure things out certain configurations trial and error Dan and team have been tremendous partners for us. If you look at this slide, I think it's a build slide We ran into, you know, some issues we reached out to Dan and team and they were so fast to jump on it resolve it Get it back into the community You know revert those changes or backport those into our deployments It was fantastic. I would say that the level support Was a great surprise from from my perspective So, you know, they certainly are committed to open stack It was proof in our engagement the way that they just jumped to the table and helped us out You know, we work for a financial institution. I do We are not in the role of riding open source and contributing but to have a partner that's willing to do that on our behalf is huge And VMware is certainly stepped up to the plate in that area Thanks. Ty, do you have anything that you want to add from the VMware operations perspective under cloud So as Glenn mentioned being able to make use of a lot of some of these Existing tool sets that already come with VMware infrastructure It gives us a better understanding of exactly what state our environment is is in obviously, you know clouds are highly dynamic So if you don't have a good handle on where it is where it's going where it's projected to go. It's it's very difficult Like Glenn mentioned we did work with both Dan's and As well as the engineering and development teams with with VMware and they were very responsive and showed their commitment To open stack on more than one occasion Okay, thanks So next up we have Tried our mahan Kali. All right So I'll just spend a few minutes to talk about Our implementations with open stack and Basically talking integrating with vSphere So a little bit where we have been in terms of our cloud journey essentially where since 1990s Intel IT has been Intel in general has a huge design grid environment where we do a lot of our Silicon validation and basically a lot of Simulations surrounding the different phases in the microprocessor a life cycle we do simulations in the design grid so we tend to call it the clouds uncle because we use a lot of automation and a deep Linux Expertise and Contributions to the Linux kernel as well as part of that grid environment. So some of the folks that Have been operating that environment and live through the environment. We actually brought that expertise in terms of building out our cloud Private cloud environment as part of our enterprise data centers and this was around 2010 and by now we have 13,000 more than 13,000 VMs in that environment and VMware is essentially the the hypervisor that we run that on and right now we have 75 percent of our enterprise apps virtualized in that particular environment and then around 2012 we started our journey on open stack with KVM as the hypervisor at that time and then we have around 1.5 KVMs on that particular environment with that background As we go forward in 2014 and beyond one of the things that we are doing is using open stack as The single control plane for our hosting environment and where it makes sense for us. I like to have at three different points the first one is that it Gives a consistent user interface That the users can Converse to in terms of interacting with different Cloud technologies that we might have in the background and the second aspect is which then had highlighted that it allows us to From an IT perspective go with an open source control plane But at the same time have the ability to Leverage different technologies from a network perspective from a hypervisor perspective from a storage perspective in the back end So it has that choice while keeping the user experience consistent and the third thing is basically It exposes our infrastructure in a manner where our developers can create higher higher value added services on top of the API that we expose from an infrastructure perspective So in terms of where our current statuses and plans are We've done an initial POC And that was a success that was successful in terms of integrating an open-stack control plane with vSphere and as I indicated we have a significant amount of Existing private cloud environment that is running on top of vSphere. So that integration is very useful and critical for us primarily the from the perspective that If you are converging to this control plane and if I am able to integrate with that existing vSphere environment there is less migration that I have to do and I'm able to offer more capability to my existing customers On this on the top of the VMs that they already have in the environment And in terms of why vSphere as a hypervisor Resonates with us. It is an enterprise capable Platform which we have been leveraging for a few years and it provides some of it The key capabilities that that we've seen a lot of use in enterprise 18 terms of live migration comes seamlessly DRS VMv4 HA and Future technologies as a VMware adds more capabilities to it In terms of the integration With the open-stack control plane. Here's what is what we have already seen work in our environment Essentially that the the VM orchestration all the capabilities are being able to create a new VM destroy a VM be able to start and stop that So with purely with vSphere vSphere unless we have access to vSphere Our users didn't have the ability to control their VMs But with an open-stack control plane exposing them via the Nova API. They're able to do that we have also tested the VM resizing and As well and that works seamlessly as well another thing that we've done is In terms of the integration with storage. We're able to offer Self-service storage where you can actually create a volume destroy a volume attach it to an existing VM all that works in their existing VMware environment and The one thing at which I highlighted earlier is that we are able to import the metadata of the VMs from the existing cloud environment into an open-stack control plane and offer Customers additional capability to control the same VMs that they've already deployed rather than having to migrate them So in terms of some of the things that we see as additional asks from VMware perspective This in terms of first bullet the multi-data centers for virtual center They've already ported they've already enabled that capability nice house and back to Havana We just haven't had the opportunity to test it. So as we test it will give the appropriate feedback and We definitely Look forward to continued VMware participation and support for the open-stack control plane primarily because it It allows us that Vendor agnostic control plane that we can Converse to and So continue the other aspects that are key is to continue working on the Federation across multiple instances of VMware private cloud environment as well as in general private cloud environment that we have And the last thing is One thing that we noticed is when you integrate from open-stack control plane to VMware To open-stack. It looks like a one very big compute node So there are some capabilities that we leverage that we are looking to leverage if you will where we have multiple silos of Instances a private cloud instances in our environment where some offer additional capabilities which are more Which are more useful for our secure workloads if you will so we want to be able to have For VMware vSphere to be able to expose say visibility into the individual nodes so that we can land secure workloads on secure systems and so on so forth Great thanks a lot guys and I think actually host we should talk about host aggregates because We're already compatible with the host aggregates API and I think that that should solve that problem I do not need two microphones No, I was doing it too Thanks again guys. I really appreciate you guys coming by and sharing your experiences I think you had one more You're gonna get to go to Paris that sounds like a good idea Okay, so the last thing I want to touch on before we wrap up this session is some some opportunities for you guys to be able to Get hands-on with this stuff really easily and so VMware has this thing called hands-on labs The goal is just to educate our customers about how our software works you can go to a website and you can see that you are all there and Within 30 seconds you have a virtual desktop spun up into a fully set up lab environment And this particular lab environment that you'll go to here is a deployment of open stack with vSphere Supporting Nova and Cinder and with VMware NSX supporting Neutron So not only is this a great way to learn about open stack on VMware But actually I'm not aware of any other way period on any platform You know for you to get just this quickly of hands-on to a real open stack setup Or you can act not just as a tenant But actually as an administrator and go into the guts of the system and learn how it works. So, um, you know this This is great. It's available to everyone. I Encourage you encourage you to check it out and send us feedback So there's also another tool that actually we use to build that lab and we're also making available It's something called Vova and it's not a product. It's not for production work load It's targeted just for lab deployments. So if you have an existing VMware lab This is basically an open stack on one virtual appliance that you download You enter a few bits of information. This is my vCenter IP address. This is the username password This is the cluster. I want to use for open stack. Press go and in a couple minutes It's it's a fully opens fully functional open stack on VMware environment So this this appliance right here the one that's public and you can go get there that um, that does Nova cinder Glance now and a nova network and then if you have access to NSX you have access to an equivalent Vova appliance for that so and we're happy to announce today that we have just released literally today the A new version of over that's based on the recent ice house release So this lets you get kind of hands-on and a great way to gain experience with what's new From VMware and the ice house release things like our new vSphere glance driver that lets you use the same data storage You're using for cinder Use that for glance back for backing your glance discs a lot of stuff around storage policies that we did we'll highlight this in the demo But it's very easy to create multiple tiers of storage With your VMware environment that's consumed by open stack vSAN. I've already talked we now have full vSAN support support for ova's Better image and image caching and a lot more so You go to this website this will take you to the general VMware community And that's a place where you can ask questions about how open stack and VMware work together Whether it's about Vova or whether you're you deployed open stack and VMware with some other technology some other distro for example So, you know my team and our inter-engineers help monitor that site and can hopefully help you out So with that I mentioned that this is basically We've got a couple more sessions coming up after this But we've actually already had a good number of sessions about VMware and open stack at the summit The white ones are actually by VMware the gray ones are customers who are kind of talking about their use of open stack and VMware products So as you know all the talks are online So even if you missed one of these and it looks interesting just write it down and you'll be able to find it online in a couple weeks Coming up next we're gonna do a deep dive demo Then we're gonna have kind of a lightning round of distros talking about Their support for vSphere nanosex at the same time in the back will be supporting a Set of people if you want to go do that hands-on lab. That's online. We'll have kind of a set of experts I think they're calling it a genius bar. It's probably a trademark infringement, but you know that you can there's an IRC room And there'll be people that can help you there and then After that 430 we're talking about Congress, which is a new project that VMware's help helped initiate with an open stack to let people specify high-level business and security policies with an open stack and then at 520 we'll be talking about Vsan and how it fits into open stack vSan is again that the new virtual sand technology from VMware So I think with that again just the key takeaways I think you know I'm really excited about about the opportunity that VMware has to to help bring open stack into a lot of enterprises and to really Make make make real this this benefit of the promise of open stack in terms of an open standard API That's very developer friendly on top of great infrastructure that that enterprises already know and love So hopefully you've taken at least two things away from this talk First off is that you know VMware has a lot of really interesting data center technology and that's fully integrated into open stack And you know that's the reason we really do believe that that if you know you're an enterprise You know VMware the best way you could possibly run open stack is to run it on top of VMware And the second thing and you know more important to me personally actually is that you just that you kind of you have a Different mindset in terms of how you think about open stack in VMware And that you really do recognize that VMware is working hard to help make its customers successful with open stack If that's what the customer wants to do because we're all about supporting customer choice And that we're actively participating in the open stack community to make sure that our technologies are well integrated So with that we are just like probably everyone else We are hiring open stack engineers that what you heard today is is exciting come talk to me That's the link for the online community if you have questions if you do the Twitter I tweet a lot about open stack and VMware So you can you can follow me there, and I'm happy to take any questions Otherwise, I'll just leave this up in the background and again, and I think probably about 10 minutes We'll start on the deep dive demo session. Thanks