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Microsoft Forms Cloud Partnership with Red Hat

In a bid to help enterprise customers embrace a hybrid cloud computing model, Microsoft and open source champion Red Hat today announced a pact that will see more choices and flexibility in deploying Red Hat's popular Linux OS and other solutions to the Azure cloud.

The partnership, which was described by Microsoft as perhaps its deepest partnership with another major enterprise infrastructure provider, will involve a Red Hat engineering team moving to Redmond to supply joint technical support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) workloads running in the Azure public cloud and on Microsoft's hybrid cloud offerings.

The agreement also calls for applications developed in the Microsoft .NET Framework language to run on RHEL, OpenShift and the new Red Hat Atomic Host container platform.

If describing this pact as the deepest partnership ever sounds like hype, Microsoft and Red Hat have never made such a claim with the many other jointly announced partnerships.

"We don't do this depth and level of support with any other partner at this point," said Paul Cormier, Red Hat's president of products and technologies, during a web conference announcing the pact. "It's a much more comprehensive partnership than we have with any of our other public cloud providers. The colocation of our support teams is really a significant differentiator for our enterprise customers."

The other differentiator is that Windows and RHEL are the most widely deployed enterprise server platforms, he said. Scott Guthrie, Microsoft's EVP of Cloud and Enterprise, who was on the webcast with Cormier, agreed. "I am not aware of us doing anything like this with any other partner before," Guthrie said.

Making the agreement even more noteworthy is it's coming from companies who once had nothing but disdain for each other. "There wasn't much trust there," Cormier said flatly.

The devil will be in the details and execution of what the two onetime rivals announced today and whether it lives up to its promise. Specifically there are five components to what the two companies hope to deliver:

  • Combined support services for hybrid cloud including Red Hat products and on premises customer environments running on Microsoft Azure. "What this means is as we bring our solutions together to solve customers' real problems," Cormier said. "We need to do that in such a way that we can really give enterprise class support that our customers want, need and expect." To accomplish this, he said Red Hat will collocate its engineers with Microsoft's so when issues or questions arise regarding integration points, their respective engineers will work together to address it.
  • Red Hat will use the newly open sourced .NET technologies into its platforms including RHEL, its OpenShift cloud PaaS offering and Red Hat Atomic Host, the company's container offering. This will let developers build applications that include .NET services, which could be more appealing now that Microsoft has open-sourced the framework. "I think this will give us greater interoperability across the technologies and really start to give our customers the heterogeneous world that they really want," Cormier said.
  • Subscriptions to Red Hat products supported on Azure and Windows will be supported by Red Hat the same way they are supported when running in traditional enterprise environments. Red Hat will also expand cooperation and work on Windows being supported on Red Hat products including RHEL, OpenStack and OpenShift.
  • Red Hat's systems management offering Cloud Forms will include management of workloads on Azure, providing a common management pane for physical workloads private cloud environments including its OpenStack distribution and OpenShift.
  • Microsoft is joining the Red Hat Certified Cloud and Service Provider Program (CCSP) program, providing certified support for all of its products in Azure. With Microsoft joining the CCSP, Guthrie said "Red Hat subscriptions will become portable to Microsoft Azure, with full Red Hat cloud access, enabling a consistent application platform on and off premises."

The two teams will start their collocation in Redmond over the next few weeks, Guthrie said. Over time, they may send teams to other locations as well. In the coming months, Guthrie said the two companies will let customers sign up and pay for licenses of Red Hat products on Azure on a usage basis.

"You'll see the integration of the Red Hat CloudForms offering with both Azure and our System Center VMM product that will enable consistent workload management in a hybrid way," Guthrie said. "We'll also enable Red Hat enterprise Linux Atomic Host on Azure and basically deliver a supported and certified small footprint container host that customers can use for enterprise Linux containers."

The deal is the latest evidence that Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella meant business when he last year said "Microsoft loves Linux" and gives further evidence to sister publication Redmond Magazine's September cover story that Microsoft's DNA is changing. Now the onus is on both companies to make their respective wares interoperate as they promised today.

About the Author

Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.

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