VergeOS Implements the oVirt Standard — Exit VMware Keep Your Backup

Organizations leaving VMware face a question that stalls more migrations than any technical challenge: will our backup tools still work? VergeOS answers that question at the architecture level. VergeOS 26.1.2 implements the oVirt API natively — the same interface that enterprise backup platforms like Veeam are already built to support. Exit VMware. Keep your backup tools. No custom integration, no replacement vendors, no renegotiated contracts.

Key Takeaways
Exit VMware without replacing your backup platform. VergeOS 26.1.2 implements the oVirt API natively — any backup tool that supports the oVirt or KVM standard connects immediately, with no custom development on either side.
Veeam connects to VergeOS through its existing oVirt driver in under one hour, with no code changes and no new agents. Existing backup jobs, schedules, and retention policies apply immediately.
The primary barrier to exiting VMware — backup continuity — is removed at the architecture level. Migration timelines are no longer gated by data protection readiness.
VergeOS runs on existing hardware. With DRAM up 171% and NAND flash up 55–60%, organizations avoid a forced server refresh by migrating on the infrastructure they already own.
VergeOS reduces the physical RAM footprint for the same workload count, extending DDR4 server life and reducing exposure to DDR5 pricing during the supercycle.
A live demo with Veeam runs April 15, 2026 at 1:00 PM ET — from blank environment to fully protected workloads in a single session.

The oVirt Standard: Why Backup Tools Already Support VergeOS

The oVirt API is the established interface for KVM-based virtualization environments. Major backup vendors adopted this standard as the path to supporting modern hypervisor platforms, building their products against a single, common interface rather than maintaining separate integrations for each platform. The result is a broad ecosystem of compatible tools that organizations can bring to any oVirt-compatible environment.

VergeOS 26.1.2 implements this interface natively within the platform. No custom development is required on either side. Backup platforms connect to VergeOS through the same driver they already use for KVM environments, authenticate, and operate at full production scale. Both sides work as designed.

Key Terms
oVirt API

The standard management interface for KVM-based virtualization environments. Major backup vendors implemented oVirt drivers to support KVM platforms, creating a shared compatibility layer across the KVM ecosystem.

KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine)

A Linux kernel virtualization module that serves as the hypervisor foundation for VergeOS and other open-source virtualization platforms. oVirt was built specifically to manage KVM environments.

oVirt Driver

A software component within enterprise backup platforms such as Veeam that enables communication with oVirt-compatible hypervisors. The driver handles VM discovery, snapshot management, and data transfer without platform-specific customization.

Virtual Data Center (VDC)

A VergeOS construct that encapsulates a complete, isolated environment including compute, storage, and networking. VergeOS can protect and recover an entire VDC as a single unit, independent of workload-level backup tools.

Memory and Storage Supercycle

The current market condition of simultaneous DRAM (171% projected YoY through 2027) and NAND flash (55–60% in Q1 2026) price increases, combined with extended server lead times. Organizations replacing hardware during this period face significantly elevated acquisition costs.

Two-Layer Protection Model

The data protection architecture where VergeOS handles infrastructure-level availability (disk, node, site failures) and enterprise backup platforms handle granular protection (file-level restore, application-aware backup, long-term retention). Both layers operate independently and simultaneously.

The Operational Impact of Exiting VMware with Backup Intact

The most persistent barrier to exiting VMware is not infrastructure complexity. It is the prospect of replacing data protection infrastructure that IT teams have built their recovery strategies around. VergeOS removes that barrier at the architecture level. Organizations connect their existing backup platforms to VergeOS, discover workloads, and apply current protection policies without change. Backup workflows, retention strategies, and recovery procedures carry forward intact.

VergeOS oVirt Integration — Exit VMware Keep Your BackupVeeam is a leading example of this in practice. Veeam’s oVirt driver connects to VergeOS 26.1.2 with no modifications and no custom code. The integration deploys in under an hour and runs at full production scale from day one. For any organization running Veeam as its backup standard, VergeOS is immediately compatible.

Migration projects no longer stall on backup readiness. The question shifts from “How do we handle backup after we exit VMware?” to “When do we want to move?”

Keep Your Existing Servers Through the Memory and Storage Price Supercycle

171%
Projected YoY DRAM price increase through 2027
55–60%
NAND flash contract price increase in Q1 2026 alone
Months
Extended server lead times as memory shortages hit supply chains

DRAM prices are projected to increase 171% year-over-year through 2027. NAND flash contract prices jumped 55–60% in Q1 2026 alone. Server lead times have extended to months in some categories as memory and flash shortages ripple through the supply chain. DDR4 production is winding down while DDR5 pricing reflects AI infrastructure demand that enterprise IT cannot negotiate away.

Organizations that commit to staying on VMware are committing to a hardware refresh cycle at the worst possible time. Broadcom’s licensing changes frequently require hardware that meets updated specifications, pushing organizations toward new server purchases precisely when server costs are at a cycle peak.

VergeOS runs on the hardware you already own. Exiting VMware through VergeOS means organizations migrate workloads without replacing infrastructure. The same servers that run VMware today run VergeOS tomorrow — with the same backup tools, through the same oVirt-compatible interface, on the same physical hardware.

VergeOS also reduces the RAM footprint for the same workload count. The platform’s global inline deduplication extends across memory as well as storage, reducing the physical RAM your infrastructure requires. Organizations running DDR4 hardware that might otherwise require DDR5 upgrades to sustain workload density on VMware can maintain and increase density on VergeOS without new memory purchases — a direct operational response to the supercycle.

The combination matters: exit VMware on your terms, keep the backup tools you have, keep the servers you have, and move when the timing works for your organization — not when a licensing deadline or hardware refresh cycle forces the decision.

A Two-Layer Protection Model

VergeOS and oVirt-compatible backup platforms divide data protection responsibilities cleanly. VergeOS operates at the infrastructure layer, maintaining continuous data availability and supporting recovery at the scale of entire Virtual Data Centers. Failures at the disk, node, or site level are absorbed within the platform. Backup platforms handle the granular layer — file-level restore, application-aware protection, and long-term retention. Each system operates within its intended role.

Availability

Native oVirt API compatibility is available today in VergeOS 26.1.2 and later. Organizations ready to exit VMware connect their existing backup platforms through the standard oVirt interface and begin protecting workloads immediately.

A live demonstration with Veeam is scheduled for April 15, 2026, at 1:00 PM ET. Register for the webinar.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can I exit VMware without replacing Veeam?
Yes. VergeOS 26.1.2 implements the oVirt API natively, and Veeam’s oVirt driver connects to VergeOS using the same standard KVM driver it uses for any oVirt-compatible environment. No special build, custom plugin, or replacement backup platform is required.
What VergeOS version is required for oVirt compatibility?
VergeOS 26.1.2 or later. The oVirt API endpoint is active by default in this release. No additional configuration is needed to enable it.
How long does it take to connect Veeam to VergeOS after exiting VMware?
The integration deploys in under one hour. Add the VergeOS oVirt endpoint as a managed server in Veeam using the standard KVM driver, allow VM discovery to complete, and apply existing backup policies. No pre-work is required on the VergeOS side beyond running version 26.1.2.
Will existing backup jobs and policies carry forward after the migration?
Yes. Backup jobs, schedules, retention rules, and SLA policies defined in Veeam apply to VergeOS VMs discovered through the oVirt API without reconfiguration. The policy layer lives in Veeam, not in the hypervisor, so exiting VMware does not reset your data protection posture.
Can we run VergeOS on our existing hardware without a memory upgrade?
In most cases, yes. VergeOS uses global inline deduplication across both storage and RAM, which reduces the physical memory footprint for the same workload count compared to VMware. Organizations running DDR4-based servers that would otherwise require DDR5 upgrades to sustain density on VMware can frequently maintain or improve density on VergeOS without new memory purchases — a meaningful advantage during the current supercycle.
Does oVirt compatibility work with backup platforms other than Veeam?
Yes. Any enterprise backup platform with an oVirt or KVM driver can connect to VergeOS through the oVirt API. Veeam is the most widely deployed example and the focus of the April 15 live demo, but the compatibility extends to any platform built against the oVirt standard.
Does VergeOS replace the need for an enterprise backup platform?
No — and it is not designed to. VergeOS handles infrastructure-level data protection: disk and node failure absorption, site-level replication, and Virtual Data Center recovery. Enterprise backup platforms handle granular protection: file-level restore, application-aware backup, and long-term retention. The two layers are complementary and operate simultaneously.

Further Reading

VergeIO Delivers RTX Virtual Workstations to Enterprises

Press Release — For Immediate Release VergeIO Delivers RTX Virtual Workstations to Enterprises Private cloud operating system delivers automated GPU management, MIG configuration, and driver deployment without specialized expertise ANN ARBOR, Mich. — March 31, 2026 VergeIO, the private cloud operating system company, today announced support for NVIDIA RTX vWS and vPC supported on the […]
Read More

VergeIO Strengthens Disaster Recovery and Performance with VergeOS 26.1

VergeIO Strengthens Disaster Recovery and Performance with VergeOS 26.1 Faster Site Sync, Partial Snapshots, and 4x Storage Repair Performance Extend the Platform's Industry-Leading Data Protection ANN ARBOR, Mich. — February 24, 2026 — VergeIO, creator of VergeOS, the industry's first private cloud operating system, today announced VergeOS 26.1, extending the platform's built-in data protection with […]
Read More

Nick Matheson of VergeIO Honored as a 2026 CRN Channel Chief

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — February 3, 2026 — VergeIO, the VMware alternative for organizations seeking unified infrastructure, today announced that CRN®, a brand of The Channel Company, has selected Nick Matheson, Director of Channel Sales, for inclusion on the prestigious 2026 CRN Channel Chiefs list. This annual recognition celebrates IT vendor and distribution executives who […]
Read More