Zeus Technology has upgraded its application delivery appliance to include
support for Java, enabling IT staff to introduce more granular controls for
network traffic.
Zeus Extensible Traffic Manager version 5.0 also includes full support for
load balancing session initiation protocol (SIP) traffic, which is increasingly
used in IP telephony. Support for real time streaming protocol and IPv6 has also
been added.
"Traffic management has become very application-focussed and so what you need
is an environment which can manage traffic accessing applications, inspect it
and change it on-the-fly if necessary," said
Zeus strategic accounts vice president, Steve
Webb.
Zeus had used its Perl-like TrafficScript language to inspect traffic at
ultra-fast network speeds, but communicating with databases or authentication
services was more problematic, said Webb. By adding Java capabilities,
TrafficScript can now call the thousands of Java libraries enterprises have,
improving network administrators' ability to control network traffic, he added,
Webb pointed out that potentially Java libraries could perform multiple
functions, such as 'watermarking' documents leaving firms' networks
automatically. Since it runs on commodity hardware, any upgrades in processor
core numbers or clock speeds, would lead to an instant 'speed bump' for firms
deploying Zeus systems, he added.
Webb reported a typical cluster of two ZXTM systems can deliver over 5Gbit/s
of application traffic, and throughput scales linearly as further nodes are
added to the cluster.
Zeus supports Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD on hardware appliances, and the
technology is available as virtual appliances for VMware Virtual Infrastructure
3 and Windows Virtual Server 2005 R2.
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