Private and Public cloud computing, Internet hosting services
Fate
Acquired by Oracle Corporation
Founded
April 10, 2010 (2010 -04-10)(formerly known, in stealth mode, as Benguela, late 2008)
Founder
Chris Pinkham
Willem Van Biljon
Headquarters
Mountain View, California
Cape Town, South Africa
Products
Nimbula Director
Nimbula was a computer software company that existed from 2008 to 2017. It developed software for the implementation of public and private cloud computing environments.[1]
Contents
1History
2Features
2.1Release History
3References
4External links
History
The company was first incorporated as Benguela, based in Menlo Park, California with a development center in Cape Town, South Africa .[2][3]
It was founded in late 2008 by Chris Pinkham and Willem Van Biljon, who had developed the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2).[4]
The company raised a total of $20.75 million in venture funding from Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners and VMware.[5][6][7]
Their software was designed to make it easier for service providers and enterprises to build, manage and deploy infrastructure as a service (IaaS) offerings similar to Amazon EC2.
The company emerged from stealth mode in June 2010 and changed its name to Nimbula.[8][9]
Diane Greene and Roelof Botha became members of the board of directors at that time.[8][4]
Eventually the company had its office in Mountain View, California.
A public beta version of its software was announced in December 2010.[10] Nimbula Director 1.0 was released in April 2011.[11]
Nimbula was Named a ‘Cool Vendor’ in Cloud Management by Gartner in April 2012.[12]
In October 2012, Nimbula joined the OpenStack Foundation.[13]
In March 2013, Nimbula was acquired by Oracle Corporation.[14]
Features
Nimbula Director software allows users to implement IaaS-style private, public and hybrid clouds. The software was aimed at both enterprise customers and service providers. It can manage both on- and off-premises infrastructure through a Web UI, an API or a command line interface.
Nimbula Director’s features include:
Control access to local and external cloud resources with a policy based authorization system supporting multi-tenancy.
Hands-off automated installation on bare metal
Automated (zero touch) cluster expansion as new hardware is added
API to manage local and external cloud resources
Reduce demands on system administrators through low-touch automated cloud management.
Multiple hypervisor support from a single management pane
Support for common cloud APIs like Amazon Web Services API
Support for Linux and Windows virtual machines (VMs)
Integrate existing user services through support for Active Directory/LDAP
Elastic IPs and security groups
Support for virtual ethernets, allowing creation of isolated Layer 2 networks
Integrated system metrics and reporting that will allow for integration with chargeback systems
Nimbula's license agreement allowed deployment of the software on up to 40 CPU cores without a license fee.[15]
Release History
Product
Released
Highlighted features
Nimbula Director v1.0
April 6, 2011
Nimbula Director v1.5
September 26, 2011[15]
Policy-based automation
Persistent block store
Customizable installer for OS
Nimbula Director v2.0.1[16]
June 14, 2012
Orchestrations
VMware ESXi Support
AWS API "Shim"
Nimbula Director v2.0.2[17]
July 30, 2012
Maintenance release
Nimbula Director v2.0.3[18]
August 7, 2012
Maintenance release
Nimbula Director v2.0.3.1[19]
September 12, 2012
Maintenance release
Nimbula Director v2.0.4[20]
November 14, 2012
Maintenance release
References
↑"Nimbula Inc - Company Profile and News" (in en). https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/company/0346711Z:US.
↑Charles Babcock (August 26, 2010). "Nimbula Secures $15 Million Venture Capital Investment". Information Week. http://www.informationweek.com/news/software/hosted/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=227001128.
↑Jon Brodkin (June 15, 2010). "Amazon EC2 creators to launch cloud computing start-up: Benguela building cloud infrastructure software, with focus on virtualization". Network World. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/061510-benguela-cloud-computing.html.
↑ 4.04.1Patrick Hoge (June 21, 2010). "Amazon vets start cloud computing firm". San Francisco Business Times. http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2010/06/21/daily39.html.
↑"The $20 Million Club: 10 Well-Funded Cloud Startups". 29 October 2010. http://gigaom.com/cloud/the-20-million-club-10-well-funded-cloud-startups/.
↑"Nimbula raises $15M to expand cloud service". 23 August 2010. https://venturebeat.com/2010/08/23/nimbula-funding/.
↑[1][|permanent dead link|dead link}}]
↑ 8.08.1"Diane Greene is back: Nimbula leaves the stealth mode and enters the IaaS cloud computing market". Virtualization.com. June 23, 2010. http://virtualization.info/en/news/2010/06/diane-greene-is-back-nimbula-leaves-the-stealth-mode-and-enters-the-iaas-cloud-computing-market.html.
↑Antone Gonsalves (December 7, 2010). "Nimbula Launches Cloud OS In Public Beta". Information Week. http://www.informationweek.com/news/windows/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=228600108.
↑"Nimbula Announces Immediate Availability of Nimbula Director 1.0". Press release. April 6, 2011. http://nimbula.com/news/press_release/nimbula-announces-immediate-availability-of-nimbula-director-10/.
↑"Nimbula Named a 'Cool Vendor' in Cloud Management by Leading Analyst Firm". Press release. April 16, 2012. http://nimbula.com/news/press_release/nimbula-named-a-cool-vendor-in-cloud-management-by-leading-analyst-firm/.