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VMware Migration to OpenStack

Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware and subsequent licensing changes have incentivized organizations around the world to re-evaluate their virtualization strategy. OpenStack, the open source standard for cloud infrastructure, has emerged as a leading alternative. Over 80% of OpenInfra members have already talked to customers about migrating workloads from VMware to OpenStack.

OpenStack’s flexibility and open development enables organizations to:

  • Implement a cost effective virtualization strategy by avoiding vendor lock-in
  • Modernize their infrastructure with a cloud native strategy
  • Customize their stack through increased integration options
  • Rely on a global ecosystem and diverse, active open source contributors
  • Maintain complete ownership of their infrastructure
Join Us      Read the Whitepaper 

 

OpenStack allows us to avoid vendor lock-in and allows us to customize our infrastructure to meet our specific needs. We can integrate various open-source tools and platforms, which is something we couldn't do with proprietary systems. Additionally, OpenStack's community-driven development model means we can contribute back and benefit from innovations made by others."

- Tad Van Fleet, GEICO Distinguished Architect

 

OpenStack to VMware Feature Comparison

There is no one-for-one feature parity between VMware, a proprietary datacenter virtualization platform, and OpenStack, an open source project allowing to build a private or public alternative to proprietary public clouds, and therefore following the same "separate API-driven services" approach as those clouds. A comparable or enhanced datacenter virtualization platform can however be implemented by combining OpenStack’s existing suite of projects with services provided by the global ecosystem of OpenStack vendors.

We'd like to thank our friends at Cloudification and the OpenStack VMware Migration Working Group for providing the content for this comparison chart. If you're interested in joining the Working Group, please email us.

VMware OpenStack & OpenStack Ecosystem

VMware vSphere (Hypervisor ESXi)

Key features:

(subject to subscription type and extra costs)

  • Web console
  • VM Live migration (vMotion)
  • Volume migration (Storage vMotion)
  • Clustering/HA for Control plane
  • Backup Integrations
  • Auto-rescheduling for VMs (VMHA)
  • Hot plug and extend (Net devices/volumes)
  • Site-to-site VM migration

OpenStack (Hypervisor KVM)

Comparable features:

  • Web console - yes
  • Live migration - yes
  • Volume migration - yes
  • Control plane HA - yes
  • Backup-Integrations - yes
  • VMHA - yes(1)
  • Hot plug and extend (Networks/Volumes) - yes
  • Site-to-site VM migration - yes(2)
  • L4-L7 load balancing - yes(3)

1 OpenStack provides VMHA functionality with Masakari
2 When OpenStack control plane stretched across DCs
3 OpenStack Octavia

VMware NSX (VCF + VMware Firewall)

Key features:

  • Switching (Layer 2 networks over Layer 3)
    • Within data center
    • Across data centers
  • Routing
    • Distributed routing
    • Active-active failover with physical routers
    • Static routing
    • Dynamic routing
    • IPv6 support
  • Virtual routing and forwarding (VRF)
    • Tenant isolation
    • Separate routing tables
    • NAT
    • EDGE Firewall
  • Quality of service control (QoS)
  • Security Groups
  • NSX gateway (L2 Gateway)
  • DPU-based acceleration
  • Federation and Multi-cloud networking

(consistent networking and security across DCs,
private/public cloud boundaries)

OpenStack Neutron

Comparable features:

  • Switching
    • Within data center - yes
    • Across data centers - yes(1)
  • Routing
    • Distributed routing - yes
    • Active-active failover with physical routers - yes
    • Static routing - yes
    • Dynamic routing - yes
    • IPv6 support - yes
  • Virtual routing and forwarding (VRF)
    • Tenant isolation - yes
    • Separate routing tables - yes
    • NAT - yes
    • EDGE Firewall - yes(2)
  • QoS - yes
  • Security Groups - yes
  • L2 Gateway - yes
  • DPU-based acceleration - yes
  • Federation and Multi-cloud networking - yes(3)

1 if OpenStack control plane stretched across DCs
2 OpenStack has FWaaS extension
3 Partially with BGP VPN interconnection extension

VMware vSAN (Express Storage Architecture)

Key features:

  • Distributed Architecture:
    • Hyperconverged, integrates with vSphere
    • Based on local storage in ESXi hosts
    • Eliminates the need for external storage arrays
    • Cluster size: min 2 hosts, max: 64 hosts
    • Uses fast disks for caching and efficient placement
  • Data redundancy:
    • Distributed RAID, caching, and read/write optimizations
    • Provides fault tolerance at the storage policy level
  • Scalability:
    • Scalable with additional ESXi hosts to the cluster
    • Linear scalability of storage capacity and performance resources
  • Network speed: 25Gb/100Gb
  • File protocols: SMB, NFSv3, NFSv4.1
  • S3-Compatible Object Storage
  • Native snapshots

Multi-site cluster: vSAN Stretched Cluster

OpenStack Cinder and Manila (based on Ceph)

Comparable features:

  • Distributed Architecture - yes
    • Distributed architecture with a cluster of storage nodes running OSDs
    • Supports object, block, and file storage interfaces
    • Cluster size: min 6 hosts, max: 1000+ hosts
    • Does not require disks for caching
  • Data redundancy - yes
    • Data redundancy through replication (3 copies) and erasure coding
    • Replicates data across multiple OSDs or uses erasure coding for fault tolerance
  • Scalability - yes
    • Highly scalable, can scale out to tens of PBs of data
    • Allows adding or removing storage nodes dynamically without disruption
  • Network speed: 10Gb/25Gb/100Gb - yes
  • File protocols: CephFS, NFS via Manila - yes
  • S3-Compatible Object Storage - yes
  • Native snapshots - yes
  • Multi-site: Ceph RBD Mirroring - yes(1)

1 RBD mirroring affects performance due to journaling

VMware vCenter (VCF, VVF and vSphere STD)

Key features:

  • Centralized Control and Visibility
  • Web client and APIs
  • Inventory search
  • Alerts and notifications
  • Dynamic resource allocation
  • Multi-tenant management

OpenStack + Prometheus, MaaS, ArgoCD

Comparable features:

  • Centralized control-plane - yes(1)
  • Web client and APIs - yes
  • Inventory search - yes
  • Alerts and notifications - yes(2)
  • Dynamic resource allocation - yes(3)
  • Multi-tenant management - yes

1 When OpenStack control plane stretched across DCs
2 Based on Prometheus + Alertmanager with integrations
3 Provided by OpenStack Watcher

VMware Cloud Director (Cloud Management Platform)

Key features:

  • Multi-site control
  • Cloud-native approach
    (Containers and VMs in the same environment)
  • Automation
  • Policy-driven Approach for Cloud management
  • Global Hybrid Cloud Management
  • Cloud Migration

OpenStack + Kubernetes

Comparable features:

  • Multi-site control - yes(1)
  • Cloud-native approach - yes(2)
  • Automation - yes(3)
  • Policy-driven Approach - yes
  • Global Hybrid Cloud Management - no
  • Cloud Migration - yes(4)

1 When OpenStack control plane stretched across DCs (Alternatively using ManageIQ)
2 Requires Managed Kubernetes service installation
3 Via Terraform, Heat or SDK
4 Using third-party migration service

VMware Aria Operations for Logs (vRealize Log Insight)

Key features:

  • Collect logs in files
  • Send logs to centralized system
  • Provide interface to search and analyze logs

OpenStack + Logstash + OpenSearch OR OpenStack Venus

Comparable features:

  • Collect logs in files - yes
  • Send logs to centralized system - yes
  • Interface for search and analysis - yes

VMware Aria Automation

Key features:

  • Multi-cloud environments management
  • DevOps for infrastructure
  • Infrastructure as code and Kubernetes automation
  • Network automation
  • SecOps for infrastructure
  • SaltStack

OpenStack Heat

Comparable features:

  • Multi-cloud environments management - yes(1)
  • DevOps for infrastructure - yes
  • Infrastructure as code and Kubernetes automation - yes
  • Network automation - yes
  • SecOps for infrastructure - yes
  • Ansible + GitOps approach - yes

VMware Aria Operations for Networks

Key features:

  • Networking
    • End-to-end troubleshooting traffic and path
    • Network assurance and verification
    • Overlay and underlay network troubleshooting
  • Applications
    • Application discovery and plan for migration
    • Measure application latency and performance
    • Finding network bottlenecks for application
    • Analyze traffic
  • Security
    • Troubleshoot security
    • FW policies and network segmentation recommendations
    • Dependencies map to reduce risk during migrations

OpenStack Neutron + Hubble + SkyDive

Comparable features:

  • Networking
    • End-to-end troubleshooting traffic and path - yes(1)
    • Network assurance and verification - yes
    • Overlay and underlay network troubleshooting - yes(1)
  • Applications
    • Application discovery and plan for migration - no
    • Measure application latency and performance - no
    • Finding network bottlenecks for application - no
    • Analyze traffic - yes
  • Security
    • Troubleshoot security - no
    • FW policies and network segmentation recommendations - yes
    • Dependencies map to reduce risk during migrations - no

1 Underlay network with Cilium Hubble, overlay (cloud) networks with SkyDive

VMware Horizon (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure)

Key features:

  • Remote desktops
  • Hybrid cloud management

OpenStack + OpenUDS

Comparable features:

  • Remote desktops - yes
  • Hybrid cloud management - no

VMware SQL (Database as Service)

Key features:

  • PostgreSQL support
  • MySQL support

OpenStack Trove

Comparable features:

  • PostgreSQL support - yes
  • MySQL support - yes
  • MongoDB support - yes
  • Redis support - yes
  • Cassandra support - yes

Source: Cloudification

OpenInfra Foundation Members Supporting Migration from VMware to OpenStack

The OpenInfra Member: VMware Migration working group formed to collaboratively address the market opportunity for organizations to re-define their virtualization strategy. Participants represent the global ecosystem of OpenStack experts who support the OpenInfra Foundation. New participants are welcome to join, share VMware migration experience, and build more OpenStack awareness as a virtualization alternative.

B1 Systems
Binario Cloud logo
Binero logo
Canonical logo
Cleura logo
Cloud & Heat logo
Cloudbase Solutions logo
Cloudification logo
Coredge logo
EasyStack logo
Fairbanks logo
Huawei logo
Mirantis logo
Okestro logo
PlanetHoster logo
Rackspace logo
Red Hat logo
Sardina Systems logo
Storware logo
Ultimum Technologieslogo
Vexxhost logo
Virtuozzo logo
VyOS logo
Worteks logo
ZConverter logo

Successfully migrate from VMware to any OpenStack Powered cloud using tools from these companies:

Part of the open-source ecosystem by VEXXHOST, Migratekit is a CLI tool for seamless VMware to OpenStack VM migrations. It is designed to streamline transfers and reduce downtime to nearly zero with a two-phase process.

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Coriolis® simplifies migrating VMs with storage and networking across clouds. It automates migrations and DRaaS, reducing manual errors and ensuring minimal downtime during cloud infrastructure transitions.

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ZConverter offers seamless migration, hybrid backup, and serverless disaster recovery across multi-cloud platforms, supporting mass migration and drills. Get free migration licenses when switching your customer’s backup solution to ZConverter Backup.

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FAQs

How have the licensing changes resulting from Broadcom's acquisition of VMware impacted users?
  • They shook the confidence of their users, putting a 45% market share at risk
  • Broadcom switched strategies to target/support enterprise solutions at the expense of small to medium sized Managed Service Providers
  • Prices were raised for renewing contracts, in some cases as high as 500%
  • Companies with extremely large footprints and perpetual licenses were affected
  • VMware's strong partner program was dismantled virtually overnight, affecting smaller MSPs
  • Pricing structure changed, requiring purchase of the entire VMware Cloud Foundation suite
Is this a danger or an opportunity for open source software solutions?
This is an opportunity for open source solutions that follow the "4 opens" - open source, open development, open governance, and open design. Relying on single vendor open source projects puts companies at risk similar to proprietary software. Projects like OpenStack, with its 14-year history and multi-vendor support, are seeing a resurgence due to this uncertainty.
Why should VMware users consider migrating to OpenStack over other solutions? Who is that best for?
  • Viable for organizations running 3 or more compute nodes
  • Avoids vendor lock-in due to its open source nature
  • No licensing fees or required service contracts
  • Seamless integration with various technologies, both proprietary and open source
  • Robust scalability, enabling resources to be scaled on demand
How large does my team need to be to implement OpenStack for my organization?
  • Work with an OpenStack provider or consultant to help set up and retrain your existing VMware team
  • A team as small as 2-3 OpenStack engineers can achieve a cost-effective cloud native virtualization solution
What are some of the challenges in migrating from VMware to OpenStack?
The primary challenges are terminology and education. VMware has a very simple UX and many companies have been invested in VMware solutions for a long time. The OpenInfra Foundation is working to educate the market around feature parity and address potential gaps between OpenStack and VMware.
What migration tools are available to migrate from VMware to OpenStack?
Are you seeing an increase in interest in OpenStack since the VMware relicensing announcement?
  • 80% of OpenInfra Members have received requests to migrate users from VMware to OpenStack
  • Over 60% of members have already completed a successful migration
  • Companies like Rackspace and Mirantis are seeing opportunities to gain market share using OpenStack
  • The OpenInfra Foundation is fielding questions from both MSPs and VMware customers
  • Partner organizations are working with companies like GEICO to move workloads from VMware to OpenStack
  • This is expected to have a long-term impact, as many companies recently renewed their VMware licenses and are still evaluating their options