Beijing time, November 22, EMC announces the upgrade of Atmos Cloud IBuySpy Platform, new Linux support, additional metering services and extra administrative reporting and control functions.
Atmos geodrive, a software tool that provides cloud storage as an application experience on a local system drive, can now be deployed on a Linux server. Before, it can only run on Windows systems.
Atmos is an EMC cloud tool designed to manage information in the global distributed large data and cloud storage environment. It supports unstructured data that resides on multiple systems and different data centers, and provides administrators with a unified interface for managing infrastructure and policy-based control capabilities.
Atmos Cloud IBuySpy Platform
Extending applications
EMC offers Atmos products that can be used either in the corporate data center or in services that create the service for the wizard-architected storage service provider.
The EMC Atmos Cloud delivery platform is an extended application that provides web-based access to Atmos cloud services for end users to help set up user accounts, store and access data. It also allows cloud administrators to set up storage and bandwidth metering statistics for cloud user consumption, thereby deducting the amount accordingly.
The latest Atmos Cloud IBuySpy Platform v1.1, encapsulated in the form of VMware Vapp, and allows the user to install the storage-as-service function by clicking the mouse.
At the same time, the new cloud delivery platform extends metering capabilities, allowing administrators to determine how users can access cloud services. For example, access is through a simple rest Web service interface or a company's file system protocol.
Support Customization
It also allows cloud administrators to view the bandwidth resources consumed by end users using cloud services and to close user accounts that exceed the usage limit.
V1.1 also allows the enterprise to customize its own Atmos cloud portal site. The Atmos cloud delivery platform is pre-set, but "it turns out that in many cases, service providers want to customize what they want," said Jon Martin, marketing director at EMC Inc.
"Now they can get the source code permission to integrate them into the user's own environment." ”
(Responsible editor: The good of the Legacy)