Explore chapters and articles related to this topic
Introduction
Published in Sunilkumar Manvi, Gopal K. Shyam, Cloud Computing, 2021
Sunilkumar Manvi, Gopal K. Shyam
VMware vCloud Director is a comprehensive, integrated Cloud platform that includes all the elements to build Cloud environments and operationalize VMware vSphere virtualized environments. VMware vCenter Server manages the compute, storage, and networking resources, and VMware vCloud Director ties all the pieces of the Cloud together so that we can deploy a secure, multitenant Cloud (where multiple independent instances of one or multiple applications operate in a shared environment) using the resources from VMware vSphere environments.
Massively Parallel Processing
Published in Robert H. Chen, Chelsea Chen, Artificial Intelligence, 2022
The deep convolutional neural network GoogLeNet that won the 2014 ImageNet Large-Scale Visual Recognition Challenge has 6.8 million parameters and is 22 layers deep, running on the Nvidia Tesla V100 with 80 Streaming Microprocessors each with 64 cores. Software to run the Teslas includes VMWare VSphere ESXI that dedicates a GPU to a Virtual Machine using DirectPath I/O.
Learning Laboratories as Services in Private Cloud Deployment
Published in Journal of Computer Information Systems, 2019
Ramon Alvarez, Timur Mirzoev, Art Gowan, Brent Henderson, S. E. Kruck
Virtualization and cloud computing technologies including VMware vSphere 5.1 and VMware vCloud Director 5.1 were employed to design, implement, and deploy a private cloud to provide a scalable computing environment.30 The private cloud platform consisted of one cloud organization with one catalog and three virtual applications (vApps). A catalog is logical construct for storing content such as golden vApp templates and media in ISO format. Golden masters or templates for virtual machines, server or desktops, along with catalogs are available for each cloud organization, and they can be shared with other cloud organizations. A vApp is a logical grouping of one or more virtual machines (VMs) into a single unit of management. Each vApp was designed to contain two VMs to support a simple client-server architecture specific to the application used in the classroom. Figure 3 illustrates the private cloud environment.