Red Hat and eNovance Announce New Collaboration

11 years ago

To drive NFV and telecommunications innovations into OpenStack

Red Hat and eNovance, a global leader in the open source cloud computing market, announced a new collaboration to drive Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) and telecommunications innovations into OpenStack. The upstream alliance is aimed at delivering the industry’s most complete, carrier-grade telecommunications offering based on Linux, Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM), and OpenStack.

Red Hat and eNovance plan to collaborate with the open source community and contribute NFV innovations to the OpenStack upstream, including work on Linux, KVM and libvirt enhancements to create an efficient VM for virtualized network functions (VNFs), and on accelerated packet processing and service chaining. The intended result is that all OpenStack community participants will benefit from the output of Red Hat’s and eNovance’s open NFV collaboration, as compared to a proprietary extensions add-on approach resulting in further vendor lock-in.

In addition to the upstream collaboration, Red Hat and eNovance are announcing an Early Adopter Program for carriers and telecommunications service providers interested in exploring the benefits of OpenStack-based clouds for NFV projects. The goal of the program is to work with independent hardware (IHVs) and software vendors (ISVs) to test, quality assure and certify complete solutions aiming to bring telecommunications service providers significant cost savings through the use of commodity compute, network and storage equipment. Telecommunication service provider end customers can benefit from a comprehensive NFV-capable Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform that enables them to be more agile and innovative when it comes to development of applications, and mobile applications in particular, that require VNF.

Radhesh Balakrishnan, general manager, Virtualization and OpenStack, Red Hat, “NFV and OpenStack are collaborating with the aim of revolutionizing the way telecommunications networks are being built and operated. With the growing dominance of KVM in NFV and telecommunications, driving upstream improvements will be a key focus of our collaboration with eNovance.”