Serdar Yegulalp
Senior Writer

Suse does OpenStack with Suse Cloud 3

analysis
Feb 20, 20143 mins

Suse's OpenStack attempts to quell long-standing deployment headaches, adds more hypervisor options than Red Hat

Like Linux before it, OpenStack is manifesting via different vendors, each a product of a different development philosophy and target market. Now, the creator of a major business-grade Linux — not Red Hat, but Suse — is revving its own edition of OpenStack.

Dubbed Suse Cloud 3, this distribution of the Havana edition of OpenStack supports two of the big new features rolled out for OpenStack this time around: its orchestration (Heat) and telemetry (Ceilometer) components.

It’s more or less in line with what Red Hat offers with its OpenStack distribution, which is fast becoming the de facto version. Suse departs from Red Hat, though, in two major ways. Pete Chadwick, senior cloud solutions manager at Suse, explained that the differences focus on easing complexity: “We have always understood that the initial deployment and long-term operation of an OpenStack-controlled cluster is relatively complicated.”

That’s an understatement. Problems with OpenStack’s complexity remain a major complaint, even after much of the work Red Hat’s done to try and make OpenStack manageable.

Suse separated itself from the OpenStack pack by using the open source project Crowbaroriginally produced by Dell as a way to help it tame its own OpenStack deployments — to create a powerful installation framework. Crowbar is itself built on top of Chef, which in turn sports multiple “cookbooks” for OpenStack; this isn’t a case of Suse devising a wholly homebrew solution with no relationship to the rest of the OpenStack ecosystem.

The second way Suse stands apart from Red Hat is via, as Chadwick put it, “our long-standing partnerships with VMware and Microsoft,” which allows Suse to “offer customers full support for mixed-hypervisor environments…. A customer with an existing VMware or Hyper-V cluster can control those servers with OpenStack while at the same time adding KVM or Xen for different workloads.” Since Red Hat seems married to KVM as its hypervisor of choice (for RHEL-based workloads, anyway), this provides an additional degree of choice in the work environment.

Suse’s partnership with VMware has also produced fruit in the form of VMware offering fully supported editions of Suse Linux Enterprise Server by way of the VMware vCloud Hybrid Service.

Back when Linux first started turning heads, companies like Red Hat and Suse packaged up the kernel and its userland utilities into useful bundles for businesses. Now the same’s finally starting to happen with other open source projects of great breadth and scope — not just OpenStack, but Hadoop too. The same names that tamed Linux may also end up taming those projects as well, and they’ll go about it differently enough to be interesting.

This story, “Suse does OpenStack with Suse Cloud 3,” was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Get the first word on what the important tech news really means with the InfoWorld Tech Watch blog. For the latest developments in business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.

Serdar Yegulalp

Serdar Yegulalp is a senior writer at InfoWorld. A veteran technology journalist, Serdar has been writing about computers, operating systems, databases, programming, and other information technology topics for 30 years. Before joining InfoWorld in 2013, Serdar wrote for Windows Magazine, InformationWeek, Byte, and a slew of other publications. At InfoWorld, Serdar has covered software development, devops, containerization, machine learning, and artificial intelligence, winning several B2B journalism awards including a 2024 Neal Award and a 2025 Azbee Award for best instructional content and best how-to article, respectively. He currently focuses on software development tools and technologies and major programming languages including Python, Rust, Go, Zig, and Wasm. Tune into his weekly Dev with Serdar videos for programming tips and techniques and close looks at programming libraries and tools.

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