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George Crump

May 16, 2026 by George Crump

Six weeks ago our team sat down with NVIDIA to walk through the vGPU 20 release and what it means in combination with VergeOS. The questions we expected before the webinar and the questions arriving now no longer match. That gap is the most interesting data point coming out of the last six weeks. If you missed it, you can watch it on-demand now or review the presentation. No registration is required for either.

vGPU 20 VergeOS deployment plan reviewed by an IT director

The audience that registered for the session was the audience we expected. IT directors, infrastructure architects, virtualization admins. The framing they brought was the framing the GPU virtualization market has carried for the last decade. The first question was whether the budget could absorb GPU-per-VM economics. The second was whether existing staff could run it. The third was whether deployment required rebuilding the data center.

Six weeks of follow-up conversations have replaced that framing with something narrower and more practical. Teams want to know where to deploy first. That shift is the entire point of the vGPU 20 plus VergeOS release, and it deserves a longer look at what changed in the platform to produce it.

Key Takeaways
  • vGPU 20 is the first NVIDIA release with engineered VergeOS support and bidirectional escalation between the two engineering teams.
  • RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell is the first data center GPU to combine universal MIG with vGPU in a single SKU, supporting up to four hardware-isolated slices and up to 48 VMs per card.
  • Pass-through, vGPU, and MIG run through one VergeOS form with no CLI required.
  • One driver upload produces the guest ISO automatically, which VergeOS attaches at VM boot.
  • Snapshot and replication carry the GPU device configuration with the VM, so DR inherits GPU state.
  • The trial license covers 128 seats for 90 days from the NVIDIA licensing portal.

The vGPU 20 and VergeOS Integration That Aged Well

The first thing the webinar covered was the integration story itself. NVIDIA released vGPU 20 with official VergeOS support as a host platform. The detail that matters is not the support statement. The detail is the engineering relationship behind it.

NVIDIA vGPU 20 driver stack integrated with the VergeOS host platform

NVIDIA and VergeIO now share dual-direction escalation paths. New driver features and new GPU classes move into VergeOS faster than they moved into the platforms that came before. Six weeks of feature requests have already run through that channel. The integration is not a logo on a slide. It is an active engineering relationship with named contacts on both sides.

That structural change is the part of the announcement that has aged the best in the field. Customers who picked VergeOS as a host two years ago for unrelated reasons now find themselves on the receiving end of features they did not pay for in their original evaluation.

RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell: The vGPU 20 Hardware Foundation

The RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell is the first data center GPU to combine universal MIG with vGPU in a single SKU. That one sentence is the entire technical story for vGPU 20 hardware. Universal MIG means the card partitions itself into up to four hardware-isolated slices, and each slice runs both compute and graphics workloads through vGPU. The arithmetic stops at 48 VMs on a single card, with hardware-allocated frame buffer and hardware-allocated compute.

RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell partitioned into MIG slices on VergeOS

The noisy neighbor argument that has haunted GPU virtualization for a decade no longer applies on this hardware. Latency-sensitive workloads, inference at the edge, and interactive design sessions finally have a deterministic GPU model. The frame buffer is reserved at the silicon layer. The compute slice is reserved at the silicon layer. Both allocations are guaranteed by the chip, not by the hypervisor scheduler. VergeOS surfaces these slices through the standard vGPU 20 configuration form, so the silicon-level isolation is available without specialist tools.

That last point matters more than the seat count. The teams asking sharper questions in the last three weeks are the teams that read the spec sheet, ran the math, and recognized that the underlying isolation model has changed. A hardware-reserved 1/4-slice on a single Blackwell card outperforms most full GPUs from two generations ago in determinism, which is the metric inference and interactive workloads care about.

Key Terms
MIG (Multi-Instance GPU)
Hardware partitioning that divides a single physical GPU into isolated slices, each with reserved frame buffer and compute. Allocation happens at the silicon layer rather than through software scheduling.
vGPU
NVIDIA’s software-driven sharing model that allows multiple VMs to share a physical GPU or a MIG slice through a guest driver.
Pass-through
Direct assignment of an entire physical GPU to a single VM with no sharing layer. The simplest model, used for workloads that need an entire card.
Heterogeneous Profiles
Running AI inference, knowledge-worker VDI, and CAD or visualization workloads on the same physical GPU at the same time, each with its own profile.
Frame Buffer
The GPU memory allocated to a workload. Hardware-reserved under MIG, software-allocated under classic vGPU.

vGPU 20 in VergeOS: Three Modes, One Form, No CLI

The vGPU 20 configuration model in VergeOS landed hardest with the audience. Pass-through, vGPU, and MIG all run through the same VergeOS form. The form replaces the CLI, the vendor-specific manager, and the second tool that other platforms ship with. The admin who configures a pass-through GPU configures a MIG slice the same way. GPU virtualization takes three forms with different tradeoffs in flexibility and isolation, and a single configuration model removes the operational tax of running all three.

VergeOS administrative form showing pass-through, vGPU, and MIG configuration on a single screen

Paul Hodges ran the live MIG configuration demo during the session. The reaction in the chat was the reaction we have been hearing in every follow-up call. The point-and-click form removed the specialist requirement from the buying decision.

That observation has held. The teams moving fastest in the last six weeks are the teams that opened those calls with a sentence we used to hear in every GPU conversation. We do not have GPU expertise on staff. Those are the same teams that have deployed first. The form removed the gating factor. The engineers who would have spent a quarter learning a vendor-specific GPU management tool spent an afternoon learning a VergeOS form and moved on.

One Upload, DR-Aware Deployment

The vGPU 20 deployment model in VergeOS is the second piece that has produced unexpected follow-up. Upload the NVIDIA driver bundle and the client config token once. VergeOS generates the guest driver ISO. The ISO attaches to the VM on first boot. There are no portal round-trips, and the manual driver install per guest disappears. The driver and license token live with the VM lifecycle, not outside it.

VergeOS automated workflow building a guest driver ISO and replicating GPU state to the DR site

Snapshot and replication carry the GPU device configuration with the VM. That detail did not appear on the original webinar slide titled “what is new.” It came out during an audience question. Six weeks later, that single point has moved to the top of the evaluation list for almost every team past the initial demo.

A DR site that inherits the GPU assignment with the VM removes one of the longest-standing operational gaps in GPU virtualization. The traditional answer to “what happens to GPU workloads at the DR site” has been a runbook full of manual reassignment steps. The VergeOS answer is that the GPU assignment is part of the VM record, replicated alongside the disk and configuration. Failover carries it.

Old GPU Virtualization vs vGPU 20 + VergeOS

Capability Traditional GPU Virtualization vGPU 20 + VergeOS
Configuration interface Multiple tools, CLI required Single VergeOS form, no CLI
Driver deployment Portal trip per guest, manual install One upload, ISO auto-generated and attached at boot
Frame buffer isolation Software best-effort Hardware-reserved via MIG
Mixed workload on one card Limited or unsupported AI, VDI, and CAD concurrent on one card
DR with GPU state Manual runbook reassignment Snapshot and replication carry the GPU configuration
Specialist staff required Yes No
Trial license Varies by vendor and SKU 128 seats, 90 days, NVIDIA portal

Read the Full White Paper

GPU Virtualization Without the Complexity covers the full architecture, the validated hardware list, and the five deployment scenarios behind the field observations in this post.

View the White Paper

No registration required.

Visit the GPU Research Center

The full campaign resource library in one place: the on-demand webinar, the presentation deck, the white paper, and the analyst commentary published across StorageSwiss, VMblog, and Blocks and Files.

Explore the Hub

The Cost Conversation Has Flipped

Technical Whiteboard Session

Book a 30-minute working session to map vGPU 20 plus VergeOS against your environment.



The cost conversation has flipped. Six weeks ago the first question from every IT director on a GPU call was a variant of “we cannot justify a GPU per VM.” That question has not arrived once in the last three weeks of follow-up calls. The question now is the inverse. How many more workloads can we put on this single card.

Once a team sees a single RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell run AI inference, twenty knowledge-worker desktops, and a handful of CAD seats concurrently, the cost-per-workload math becomes the easy answer. Three projects, three budget lines, three vendor evaluations collapse into one platform decision. That collapse is what has compressed the deployment timeline.

Paul Hodges, VergeIO’s Field CTO on the webinar, put it cleanly during Q&A. Once customers see VergeOS working with NVIDIA the conversation shifts from “can we afford to do this” to “when do we start.” Six weeks of field calls have proved that the moment an IT director sees MIG configured through a point-and-click form, that observation is accurate.

The mixed-workload use case is the conversation that closes the loop. AI strategy, VDI refresh, and CAD modernization stop being three separate budgets in three separate quarters. They become one platform decision evaluated on one card.

What To Do Next

Teams ready to put this in front of their own workloads have a 128-seat, 90-day trial license available through the NVIDIA licensing portal. Pair the trial with a VergeOS test drive and the full configuration model is on screen inside an afternoon. The fastest path to validating the field observations in this post is to recreate them on a single card.

The next six weeks will produce more data. Our prediction, based on the pattern of the first six, is that the mixed-workload pilot becomes the standard first deployment shape. The teams running AI inference against a single MIG slice today will be running VDI and CAD against the same card next quarter. That is the architecture vGPU 20 plus VergeOS was built for.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does MIG eliminate noisy neighbor in every scenario?
MIG eliminates noisy neighbor for frame buffer and GPU compute, the two resources that produced the most disruption in shared GPU deployments. PCIe and host CPU contention are separate considerations, handled by the VergeOS scheduler at the host layer.
Can VMs sharing a single GPU live on different hosts?
No. The vGPU and MIG models require the VMs sharing a card to run on the host that owns the card. VergeOS placement policies handle host affinity automatically.
Does VergeOS support over-provisioning of vRAM on the GPU?
No. vRAM allocation is one-to-one with the profile. The frame buffer reservation is the foundation of the deterministic latency model, and over-provisioning would break it.
Is the RTX Pro 4500 Blackwell supported under vGPU 20 with VergeOS?
Yes. The same driver set covers the 4500 Blackwell. The MIG and vGPU configuration model in VergeOS is identical across both cards.
Does VergeOS expose an API for GPU configuration automation?
Yes. The same configuration available through the form is available through the VergeOS API, which integrates with Terraform and other infrastructure-as-code workflows.
How do I get the 128-seat trial license?
NVIDIA provides a 128-seat license valid for 90 days through its licensing portal. Pair it with a VergeOS evaluation to see the configuration model end to end.

Filed Under: GPU Tagged With: blackwell, field-report, gpu-virtualization, mig, nvidia, vGPU, vgpu-20

May 12, 2026 by George Crump

VergeOS adds CSI, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver as native Helm charts, changing the Kubernetes VMware exit math by collapsing three licensing taxes into one platform decision.

VergeIO this week announced general availability of Kubernetes support in VergeOS, and the release changes the Kubernetes VMware exit math for IT. It ships as four Helm charts on the verge-io GitHub repository, distributed as an integrated layer that delegates storage, networking, autoscaling, and node provisioning to the VergeOS API. The full announcement sits on the verge.io press release page.

VergeOS Rancher Kubernetes cluster architecture that resets the VMware exit math with CSI driver, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver

This release changes the Kubernetes VMware exit math for IT teams. Those teams pay three separate vendors to do one job. They pay Broadcom for vSphere licensing on the cluster nodes. They pay a Kubernetes distribution fee to Tanzu, OpenShift, or Rancher Prime. Many pay a third bill for overlay storage like Longhorn or Portworx, since vSphere storage policies do not extend cleanly into Kubernetes without commercial Tanzu add-ons.

The companion datasheet walks IT through what each tax costs in operational time, not just in licensing spend. The argument is direct. Most VMware exits in flight today swap the hypervisor and leave the rest of the orchestrated stack in place. That move trims the licensing line and preserves the coordination cost across compute, storage, and the Kubernetes management plane for another three budget cycles.

Key Takeaways
  • VergeOS ships native Kubernetes support as four Helm charts on the verge-io GitHub repository. Rancher remains the management plane.
  • VMware shops running Kubernetes pay three separate licensing taxes for the same workload, and the coordination cost across them runs higher than the licensing line.
  • A hypervisor swap addresses one tax. The Private Cloud OS pattern collapses all three into a single platform contract.
  • The integration was validated in production with NGAMING and Nesine, the design partner from Türkiye’s digital entertainment and gaming sector.
  • CNCF 2025 reported Kubernetes production adoption at 82%, the highest in the survey’s history. Stateful workloads are now the majority case.

The Three Taxes Behind the Kubernetes VMware Exit Math

The first tax is vSphere itself. Broadcom moved the model from perpetual licensing to subscription in late 2023. The April 2025 minimum license purchase climbed from 16 cores to 72 cores, forcing smaller VMware customers to pay for capacity that did not match their workload. Reports of price increases between 150% and over 1,000% are well documented for customers caught by the 72-core floor.

Three-Tax Stack diagram of the Kubernetes VMware exit math: vSphere licensing, Kubernetes distribution licensing, and overlay storage licensing layered on the same workload

The second tax is the Kubernetes distribution. Tanzu Kubernetes Grid, OpenShift, and Rancher Prime all charge against the same nodes that already pay for vSphere. The fee scales independently of the platform underneath. It renews on its own calendar with its own support relationship and its own integration matrix.

The third tax is overlay storage. vSphere does not project storage policies cleanly into Kubernetes without commercial Tanzu add-ons. Teams adopt Longhorn, Portworx, OpenEBS, or Rook. The overlay layer runs as a duplicate of the underlying vSAN, doubling the metadata, doubling the snapshot tooling, and doubling the management overhead. The CSI calls land on the overlay, the overlay translates to vSAN, and the team owns the contract between them.

All three taxes feed into the VMware exit math IT operations inherits when procurement signs three contracts. The licensing line is the visible cost. The coordination across compute, storage, and the Kubernetes management plane is the cost procurement does not see.

Key Terms
CSI Driver
Container Storage Interface, the standard bridge between Kubernetes and a storage platform. The VergeOS CSI driver delegates storage operations directly to the VergeOS API.
Cloud Controller Manager
Integrates VergeOS VMs as first-class Kubernetes nodes, populating provider IDs, instance metadata, and IP addresses, with native LoadBalancer service provisioning through VergeOS VNet NAT rules.
Cluster Autoscaler
Adjusts node pool size based on pending pod resource requests. Calls Rancher to provision or retire VergeOS VMs through the node driver.
Rancher Node Driver
Provisions VMs through Rancher with the same flow used for vSphere clusters. Clones a template, injects SSH keys via cloud-init, attaches networks, and powers on.

What VergeOS Kubernetes Support Looks Like

VergeIO is not introducing a Kubernetes distribution. The support layer assumes customers already run a distribution they trust. RKE2, K3s, vanilla upstream, and vendor distributions all work. The four Helm charts deliver the contracts Kubernetes needs from a platform underneath.

VergeOS Kubernetes support architecture that collapses the VMware exit math through the CSI driver, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver delegating to the VergeOS API

The CSI driver supports two backends. The NAS backend serves EXT4 volumes over NFS for ReadWriteMany access. The block backend hotplugs vSAN block drives directly to VergeOS VMs for ReadWriteOnce access. A persistent volume snapshot becomes a vSAN snapshot, so stateful workloads share the same DR and replication infrastructure that protects production VMs.

The Cloud Controller Manager populates node metadata and handles LoadBalancer service provisioning through VergeOS VNet NAT rules. Most clusters do not need MetalLB or an external load balancer. The Rancher node driver and UI extension finish the picture. An operator who provisions Rancher clusters on vSphere provisions Rancher clusters on VergeOS with the same flow. Rancher stays as the management plane the team already uses, which shifts the Kubernetes VMware exit math in the operator’s favor before the migration starts.

Live Webinar · May 20, 1 PM ET
See Kubernetes Support in Action
VergeIO Principal Engineer David Zarzycki provisions a Kubernetes cluster on VergeOS through Rancher live on the call.
Register

Comparison: Conventional Stack vs. VergeOS

 Conventional StackVergeOS
HypervisorVMware vSphere ESXiVergeHV
Distributed storagevSAN, dedicated SAN/NASVergeFS
Kubernetes distributionTKG, OpenShift, Rancher PrimeCustomer’s existing choice
Management planeTanzu Mission Control, RancherRancher continues
K8s storagevSphere CSI plus overlayNative VergeOS CSI
LoadBalancerNSX Adv LB, MetalLB, F5Cloud Controller Manager
Snapshot scopePer VM, per overlay, fragmentedPer VDC or per PV, single platform

Why the Kubernetes VMware Exit Math Matters to IT

The real VMware exit math is not in the licensing line. It is in the coordination time IT teams pay across three vendors. Procurement signs three contracts on three renewal calendars. Operations runs three upgrade matrices. Support escalations route to three vendors, and the integrations between them sit in nobody’s contract.

CloudBolt’s January 2026 survey of 302 enterprise IT decision-makers found 86% actively reducing their VMware footprint. Only 4% reported a full migration. The mass exodus is not happening. The slow unwind is, and the projects in flight are the ones that matter for the next three budget cycles.

The CNCF 2025 survey put Kubernetes production adoption at 82%, the highest in the survey’s history. The 2024 report found 74% of organizations use containers for stateful applications in production. Stateful workloads are now the majority case, and the upstream Kubernetes specification does not provide the data protection semantics those workloads need. They get those semantics from the storage substrate underneath.

The argument from VergeIO is direct. The right exit from VMware-plus-Kubernetes is a Private Cloud OS, not another hypervisor. Collapsing the three taxes into one platform changes the Kubernetes VMware exit math for IT. The migration runs through Rancher, with workloads moving on the customer’s timeline.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does VergeOS replace Rancher?
No. Rancher stays as the management plane. VergeOS adds itself as a new substrate underneath Rancher with the same provisioning flow used for vSphere clusters.
Is there a separate license for the Kubernetes support layer?
No. The four Helm charts ship inside the standard VergeOS license, which is priced per physical server. Not per core, not per socket, not by capacity.
What happens to existing TKG clusters during migration?
They keep operating. New clusters land on VergeOS through Rancher. Existing TKG clusters stay on vSphere for the duration of the migration. Workloads move on the customer’s timeline.
Does the CSI driver support both block and file workloads?
Yes. The NAS backend handles ReadWriteMany access patterns over NFS. The block backend handles ReadWriteOnce access by hotplugging vSAN block drives directly to VergeOS VMs.
Where can I read the full announcement?
The complete press release is at verge.io/press-release/vergeio-delivers-kubernetes-support. The full asset collection sits in the Research Center.

Next Steps

The full announcement, the architectural argument, the technical overview, the live demonstration, and the verge-io Helm chart repository are one click away.

Press Release
VergeIO Delivers Kubernetes Support
The full announcement covering the four-component release and the production validation with NGAMING and Nesine.
White Paper
Collapsing the Kubernetes Stack
14-minute long-form architectural argument. Three-Tax Model, the four-Helm-chart support layer, stateful K8s data resilience.
Datasheet
Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax
Technical overview with three customer scenarios, before/after architecture, deployment flow, and the evaluation framework.
Live Webinar · May 20
See Kubernetes Support in Action
David Zarzycki provisions a Kubernetes cluster on VergeOS through Rancher live on the call. 1:00 PM ET.
Research Center
Complete Resource Collection
The full set of research, briefings, and assets behind this announcement. White paper, datasheet, webinar, and more.
GitHub Repository
verge-io Helm Charts
The four Helm charts behind the Kubernetes support layer. CSI driver, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver.

Filed Under: Private Cloud

May 11, 2026 by George Crump

VergeOS adds CSI driver, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver — letting VMware shops running Kubernetes retire vSphere licensing, distribution licensing, and overlay storage in a single platform decision.

For Immediate Release
VergeOS Rancher Kubernetes cluster architecture

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — May 12, 2026 — VergeIO, the Private Cloud Operating System company, today announced general availability of Kubernetes support in VergeOS. The release adds a CSI storage driver, Cloud Controller Manager, Cluster Autoscaler, and Rancher node driver with UI extension, all distributed as Helm charts from the verge-io repository on GitHub. Together, the components let VMware customers running Kubernetes collapse three separate licensing taxes — vSphere, a Kubernetes distribution, and overlay storage — into a single platform.

VMware shops running Kubernetes today pay three separate vendors to do one job. They pay Broadcom for vSphere licensing to host cluster nodes. They pay a Kubernetes distribution tax — Tanzu, OpenShift, or Rancher Prime. Many pay a third tax for overlay storage like Longhorn or Portworx because vSphere storage policies do not extend cleanly into Kubernetes without commercial Tanzu add-ons. VergeOS now handles all three layers natively. Rancher remains the management plane customers already use. Workloads move on the customer’s timeline.

Support, Not a Distribution

VergeIO is not introducing a Kubernetes distribution. The support layer assumes customers already run a distribution they trust — RKE2, K3s, vanilla upstream, or a vendor distribution — and provides the platform underneath. Four components ship in this release:

  • CSI Driver — delegates storage operations directly to the VergeOS API, so persistent volumes participate in the full VergeFS feature set including inline deduplication, multi-tier placement, and integrated snapshots.
  • Cloud Controller Manager — integrates VergeOS VMs as first-class Kubernetes nodes, automatically populating provider IDs, instance metadata, and IP addresses, with native VNet-based LoadBalancer services on the near term roadmap.
  • Rancher Node Driver — provisions, manages, and autoscales Kubernetes clusters on VergeOS through Rancher. The Docker Machine driver clones VM templates, injects SSH keys via cloud-init, configures CPU and memory, attaches networks, and powers on. Node pools scale up and down automatically based on pending pod resource requests, executed against VergeOS compute capacity.
  • Rancher UI Extension — surfaces VergeOS-specific cloud credential and machine configuration forms inside the Rancher UI. Operators get the same provisioning experience for VergeOS clusters as for vSphere, with no context switch and no separate tool.

Customers shouldn’t have to rebuild their applications to leave VMware — and once they leave, they shouldn’t be locked in again. With Rancher on VergeOS, the workloads move, and they stay portable.

— Jason Yaeger, SVP of Product and Engineering, VergeIO

Validated in Production

Design Partner · Production Validation

NGAMING, the group that brings together Türkiye’s leading brands in the digital entertainment and gaming sector — including NESINE, Atyarisi.com, and Liderform — served as the design partner during the development process. The Nesine engineering team worked in close collaboration with VergeIO during the MVP phase to successfully validate the CSI Driver, Cloud Controller Manager, and Rancher Node Driver against real production workloads. Nesine has approved the Kubernetes support layer for use in its production environment.

Three Customer Situations

Kubernetes support in VergeOS addresses three distinct VMware-customer situations.

Situation 01

Rancher Inside vSphere

Customers running Rancher to manage Kubernetes clusters inside vSphere can keep their Rancher control plane unchanged and replace the substrate underneath. Application teams see no change in their day-to-day Kubernetes operations. Platform teams see the vSphere renewal disappear.

Situation 02

Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Customers

Customers running Tanzu Kubernetes Grid facing Broadcom roadmap uncertainty and bundled licensing pressure can run new clusters on VergeOS while existing TKG clusters continue to operate. Rancher manages both for the duration of the migration. Workloads move on the customer’s timeline — stateless services first, stateful workloads after the new platform validates under real load.

Situation 03

Bare-Metal Kubernetes

Customers running Kubernetes directly on bare metal can add hypervisor benefits — live migration, integrated DR, and a shared snapshot model — without changing their Kubernetes operations workflow. RKE2 and K3s clusters provisioned on VergeOS gain VM-level isolation and unified storage policy across containerized and traditional workloads.

Go Deeper

The full architectural argument, technical overview, live demonstration, and complete research collection live behind four destinations:

White Paper
Collapsing the Kubernetes Stack
The 14-minute long-form architectural argument. The Three-Tax Model, the four-Helm-chart Kubernetes support layer, three customer situations, and stateful Kubernetes data resilience.
Get the Paper
Datasheet
Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax
Technical overview with the three customer scenarios, before/after architecture, the four-step deployment flow, production validation, evaluation framework, and FAQ.
View the Datasheet
Live Webinar · May 20
See Kubernetes Support in Action
VergeIO Principal Engineer David Zarzycki provisions a Kubernetes cluster on VergeOS through Rancher live on the call. May 20, 2026 at 1:00 PM ET.
Register Now
Research Center
Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax
The campaign’s research-backed resource collection. White paper, datasheet, webinar registration, and the work behind every claim in this announcement.
Visit the Center

Availability

Generally Available Now

All four components are generally available now and downloadable as Helm charts from the verge-io repository on GitHub.

About VergeIO

VergeIO is the Private Cloud Operating System company, headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Its platform, VergeOS, collapses virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection into a single integrated software stack running on commodity hardware. VergeOS is a leading VMware alternative, recognized by DCIG as a Top 5 VMware Alternative across both the SME and SLED categories. The company has grown annual recurring revenue more than 80 percent year over year and serves enterprise, public sector, and service provider customers worldwide. Learn more at www.verge.io.

Media Contact

Judy Smith
JPR Communications for VergeIO
[email protected]
818-522-9673

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Filed Under: Press Release

May 11, 2026 by George Crump

Refurbished enterprise SSDs carry four supplier-side risks. VergeOS turns each one from a procurement objection into a manageable variable. Here is the risk-by-risk catalog.

The cost case for refurbished enterprise SSDs is settled. Drives leaving hyperscale and Fortune 500 fleets typically carry eighty to ninety-five percent of rated write life remaining at forty to sixty percent below new-drive pricing, against a memory and flash market where prices are not coming back down. The objection that survives is not economic. It is risk.

Key Takeaways
  • Tampered SMART data, OEM firmware lock, and residual data are caught at admission or in continuous monitoring. The drives never reach a production workload undetected.
  • Batch failure correlation is absorbed by the architecture. RF2 holds one drive loss, RF3 holds two, and ioGuardian holds anything beyond by streaming missing blocks inline.
  • The platform layer turns the cost-versus-risk question into a procurement decision rather than a faith-based purchase.
AI Generated Audio
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VergeIO · How Software Secures Refurbished Enterprise SSDs

Four supplier-side failure modes account for almost every story of a refurbished purchase gone wrong: tampered SMART data, OEM firmware lock, residual data, and batch failure correlation. The platform layer underneath the drives decides whether those four modes are manageable variables or cluster-ending events. VergeOS turns each one into a manageable variable. Three of the four are caught at admission or in continuous monitoring. The fourth is absorbed at the architecture level when the early-warning systems missed something.

In our recent webinar, Solve the Storage Crisis with Refurbished Drives, we walked through this framework at altitude. The white paper covers it in depth. This blog sits between the two as a procurement-side reference for the IT planner who has accepted the cost case and now needs to know what the platform actually does about each risk before signing the purchase order.

4 of 4Supplier-side refurb risks the platform addresses
7SMART attributes monitored continuously
24 hrIntake stress workload that exposes tampering

Risk 1: Tampered SMART Data

The first refurb risk is tampered SMART data. Less-reputable refurbishers reset the SMART counters or reflash the controller to make a drive report low write totals, low power-on hours, and high remaining wear life. A drive bought as twenty percent used arrives looking pristine. The wear catches up under load. Customers find out three months in, after the drive has been a production member of the storage pool. The detection mechanism has to operate at intake, not at the first failure.

VergeOS continuous SMART telemetry exposure across the storage poolVergeOS exposes the seven primary SMART attributes on every drive in the cluster in real time: total writes, power-on hours, reallocated sectors, wear leveling count, ECC errors, end-to-end errors, and temperature. The exposure is continuous, not on-demand. A drive that arrives reporting twenty percent used wear gets watched against its reported state from the moment it joins the pool. Tampered drives reveal themselves quickly when actual write activity moves the counters faster than the reported state would predict. VergeOS alerting can be setup to warn you of signs of this behavior without you having to check in on every drive every day.

The platform supports an intake protocol that compounds the detection. A twenty-four-hour stress workload writes against the drive at near-saturation and lets the subscription model watch the rate of change. A rate-of-change alert that fires when wear advances ten points within ten days catches tampered drives within the burn-in window. The drive goes back before any tenant data touches it.

Risk 2: OEM Firmware Lock

The second refurb risk is OEM firmware lock. Some major server vendors flash their drives with firmware that refuses to operate in any chassis other than the original vendor’s hardware. The drive looks normal on the procurement spec sheet. Once the drive arrives and gets inserted, the controller refuses to mount. A buyer who orders a hundred locked drives discovers the problem at the deployment stage and now has a procurement dispute and a deployment delay.

VergeOS reads and reports the controller firmware signature at admission. Firmware-locked drives surface immediately and the platform refuses to add them to the pool. The procurement report goes back to the buyer with the drive serials, the firmware identifiers, and the supplier reference. The drives go back under warranty. The deployment continues with the drives that admitted cleanly. No production workload was ever at risk.

The architectural answer behind the admission check matters as much as the check itself. VergeOS accepts any qualified NVMe or SATA drive from any manufacturer. A buyer who hits an OEM firmware lock has alternatives. The platform is not tied to a single drive ecosystem, so the procurement reset is a matter of warranty exchange and re-order, not a forced rebuild of the storage strategy. Hardware flexibility is what makes the lock detection actionable.

Key Terms
Drive Admission
VergeOS’s controlled process for adding a drive to the storage pool. The platform reads SMART attributes, verifies firmware compatibility, initializes the drive’s data layout, and registers it under the file system before any tenant data is written.
SMART Subscription
A platform-defined rule that fires alerts when a drive’s reported state crosses a threshold or changes at a defined rate. Catches drives whose claimed condition does not survive contact with real workload.
VergeFS
The VergeOS file system. Mediates all block access through its own metadata layer, which means raw drive content is not accessible to tenants regardless of what was on the drive before admission.

Risk 3: Residual Data

The third refurb risk is residual data. Blancco research on used SSDs entering the secondary market finds that forty-two percent retain recoverable content from a prior owner and fifteen percent contain personally identifiable information. The risk is compliance-driven as much as security-driven. A regulated buyer who deploys a refurbished drive that turns out to hold prior-owner PII has a reporting obligation under most data-protection regimes. The primary control is supplier-side. The platform-side controls compound the supplier-side discipline.

The supplier-side primary control is NIST 800-88 sanitization at the Purge level on every drive before resale. A buyer who only buys from suppliers documenting per-drive NIST 800-88 has handled the residual-data risk at the source. R2v3-certified refurbishers perform this step as part of their operating standard. The buyer who skips this discipline has skipped the most important risk control in the refurbished SSD procurement framework.

The platform-side controls behave as a second layer. VergeFS mediates every block access through its own metadata layer, so any residual content on a drive is not addressable through tenant operations. The drive’s prior data is overwritten by normal file system activity as the pool fills. The admission process formats the drive into the pool’s metadata structure before tenant workloads land on it. The drive is never raw-accessible by anything other than the file system itself.

Risk 4: Batch Failure Correlation

The fourth refurb risk is batch failure correlation. Drives that shipped together, ran the same workload, and hit the same wear curve at the same time fail in a correlated pattern. The risk is true of new media. It is more pronounced in refurbished media, where the wear distribution is tighter than a fresh procurement order. A cluster running ten drives from the same batch is running ten drives that age together and fail together.

VergeOS rate-of-change SMART alerts catching batch failure correlation across same-batch drivesThe platform handles correlated batch failure on three levels. The rate-of-change SMART subscription fires when multiple drives in a batch show wear advancing in synchronized patterns, giving the IT operator days or weeks of warning. RF2 (two synchronous replicas) absorbs the loss of any one drive without service degradation. RF3 (three synchronous replicas) absorbs two. The choice between RF2 and RF3 is a capacity question, and most customers run RF2 once they understand the layer above it.

The layer above RF2 and RF3 is ioGuardian. The platform holds a complete asynchronous copy of the cluster on a separate node and streams missing blocks inline when a failure exceeds the configured RF level. Concurrent loss of multiple drives or even multiple servers becomes a continued-service event rather than a recovery event.

The cost advantage of refurbished enterprise SSDs is real. The four supplier-side risks are also real. The platform underneath the drives decides whether the second cancels the first. VergeOS turns each risk into a manageable procurement variable. The buyer keeps the savings. The platform handles what the supplier alone cannot.

VergeIO On-Demand Webinar
The Refurbished SSD Framework

George Crump and Aaron Richman walk the secondary-market case, the procurement framework, and the architectural model that makes refurbished enterprise drives a procurement decision rather than a courage test.

Watch the Recording →
VergeIO White Paper
Solve the Storage Crisis with Refurbished Enterprise Drives

The full architecture case, the procurement framework at depth, the four risk categories, the synchronous replication model, the SMART monitoring loop, and the five-gate decision path.

Get the Paper →

Refurb Risk Treatment: Naive Platform vs VergeOS

RiskNaive PlatformVergeOS
Tampered SMARTDetected after deployment, sometimes after failureContinuous SMART exposure plus 24-hour intake stress workload plus rate-of-change alerts
OEM firmware lockDiscovered when the drive refuses to mountFirmware signature reported at admission, drive blocked from pool
Residual dataBuyer-dependent, raw blocks may be tenant-accessibleVergeFS mediates all block access, supplier NIST 800-88 enforced upstream
Batch failure correlationCluster-ending event during rebuild stormRate-of-change alerts plus RF2 / RF3 plus ioGuardian inline recovery
Frequently Asked Questions
What does VergeOS actually do when a refurbished drive arrives at the cluster?
The platform admission process inspects the drive’s controller firmware, reads the seven primary SMART attributes, formats the drive into the pool’s metadata structure, and registers it under VergeFS. Drives that report incompatible firmware or anomalous initial SMART state are blocked from admission. Drives that admit cleanly are continuously monitored from that point forward.
Can VergeOS detect tampered SMART data on a refurbished drive?
Yes. VergeOS exposes the seven primary SMART attributes continuously and supports subscription rules that alert on absolute thresholds and rate of change. A drive whose reported wear state advances faster than the supplier-claimed initial state would predict triggers the alert. A twenty-four-hour intake stress workload accelerates the detection.
How does VergeOS handle residual data from a previous drive owner?
The primary control is supplier-side: NIST 800-88 Purge-level sanitization documented per drive. R2v3-certified refurbishers perform this step as standard practice. The platform layer adds a second defense. VergeFS mediates all block access through its own metadata layer, so residual content on a drive is not addressable through tenant operations and gets overwritten by normal file system activity.
What is the platform’s response to a batch of drives all failing at once?
RF2 (two synchronous replicas) absorbs the loss of any one drive in the cluster without service degradation. RF3 (three synchronous replicas) absorbs two. ioGuardian extends the protection model beyond the RF level by streaming missing blocks inline to running VMs as the VMs request them. Rate-of-change SMART subscriptions catch correlated wear patterns across a batch days or weeks before the failures actually occur.
Can I use refurbished enterprise SSDs with VergeOS today?
Yes. VergeOS supports any qualified NVMe or SATA drive from any manufacturer. The admission process, the continuous monitoring layer, and the RF plus ioGuardian architecture are present in current shipping VergeOS releases. The procurement-side framework for qualifying a refurbished supplier sits in the campaign’s white paper and the on-demand webinar.

Filed Under: Storage

May 5, 2026 by George Crump

SAN refresh in trouble: 2026 flash inflation under-funds 2024 budgetsYour 2026 SAN refresh is in trouble. Flash inflation has pushed enterprise SSD prices up 70 percent. Refresh budgets locked in 2024 are now under-funded against current list pricing. The standard responses are to defer expansion, cut scope, or absorb the cost as a budget overrun. None of those options preserve the operational plan you set last year.

A fourth option exists. Capture the original capacity expansion at 40 to 60 percent of new flash list pricing using the secondary enterprise SSD market. Run that capacity on VergeOS instead of VMware. The hardware savings fund the platform exit. The SAN refresh costs less than it would have last year. The VMware exit pays for itself.

This is not two decisions. It is one decision executed once, with the savings stacking across both line items in the budget. The procurement framework and the architecture ship together, and the financial mechanism only works when both are deployed at the same time. This dynamic has been characterized as Broadcom’s best retention tool, since the same memory and flash supercycle that pushes refresh budgets underwater also makes the migration hardware harder to fund.

Key Takeaways
Refurbished enterprise SSDs sell at 40 to 60 percent below 2026 new flash list pricing, with 80 to 95 percent rated write life remaining at market entry.
The hardware cost delta on a SAN refresh covers the software and licensing line items of a VMware migration, converting a painful CapEx event into a near-neutral financial maneuver.
VergeOS synchronous replication with RF3 plus ioGuardian absorbs the failure rate of refurbished media without service interruption, validated by a documented customer event in which four of six hosts went down simultaneously with zero downtime and zero data loss.

Why the SAN Refresh and the VMware Exit Belong in the Same Decision

VergeOS arbitrage refresh stacks SAN and VMware exit savingsMost infrastructure teams treat their SAN refresh and their hypervisor strategy as separate problems. The SAN refresh is a procurement decision, owned by storage architects. The VMware exit is a platform decision, owned by virtualization leads and the CIO. The two budgets land in different fiscal lines, the two evaluation cycles run on different clocks, and the two vendor conversations rarely overlap.

That separation worked when storage and compute came from different vendors with different procurement paths. It does not work in 2026. VergeOS integrates storage, compute, networking, and virtualization into a single operating system. The SAN refresh and the platform exit run on the same code base, the same hardware substrate, and the same budget cycle. Treating them separately means buying two solutions where one will do.

The financial argument follows directly. A SAN refresh on VergeOS uses commodity x86 servers with refurbished enterprise SSDs at 40 to 60 percent below new flash list pricing. The capacity arrives at a fraction of the cost of a closed-architecture refresh. The hardware delta funds the VMware migration that the same cluster will host. The procurement decision and the platform decision compound into one financial outcome.

The Math: SAN Refresh Below 2025 Prices

The secondary enterprise SSD market is not a salvage market. Hyperscalers, MSPs, and Fortune 500 operators replace drives on rolling multi-year lease schedules, long before wear thresholds are met. Drives enter the secondary market with 80 to 95 percent of their rated write life remaining and 7,000 or more terabytes written endurance ratings intact. The supply is large, growing, and dominated by enterprise-grade media, not consumer drives.

The pricing math is direct. A 3.84TB enterprise SAS SSD sells new at $560 or more in current 2026 list pricing. The same drive, refurbished from a hyperscaler refresh cycle and qualified through a six-part procurement framework, sells at roughly $170. The delta is not 40 to 60 percent below 2026 list pricing. It is 40 to 60 percent below the inflated 2026 number, which means it lands competitively against what the same capacity would have cost new in 2024 or 2025.

40–60%
Cost reduction below 2026 new flash list pricing
80–95%
Rated write life remaining at secondary market entry
7,000+
Terabytes written endurance rating on enterprise refurbished

The procurement framework is the work. R2v3 supplier qualification confirms the drives came from a certified refurbisher with serialized inventory. NIST 800-88 sanitization certificates document compliant data destruction. Fraud detection verifies retail firmware against rebadged OEM drives. SMART diagnostics baseline the seven attributes that matter. Firmware validation confirms the drive runs vendor-released code. Stress testing proves the drive holds up under sustained workload. The framework is not optional. It is the difference between a SAN refresh strategy and a coin flip.

The Math: The Migration Pays for Itself

VMware renewal pricing has made the status quo untenable for a substantial portion of the installed base. Per-workload license pricing has climbed to multiples of pre-acquisition rates. The renewal conversation is no longer about a routine increase. It is about whether the platform is worth the new contract value at all.

The standard response is to evaluate alternatives, plan a migration, and request CapEx for the destination platform. The CapEx request is the problem. New compute, new storage, and new licensing all hit the budget in the same fiscal cycle, often in the same quarter. The financial picture looks like a one-time capital event piled on top of the existing operational baseline, and procurement defers the decision rather than absorb the impact.

The arbitrage play changes the picture. The VergeOS cluster pools existing flash with newly procured refurbished enterprise drives, creating a unified storage tier that runs at a fraction of standard hardware costs. The hardware cost delta on the SAN refresh creates the budget headroom that the VMware exit needs. The migration funds itself out of the savings on the storage line item. The CapEx request becomes a near-neutral request, or in many cases a net-positive one.

The financial mechanism only works when the SAN refresh and the VMware exit run on the same platform. Two separate vendors mean two separate budgets and two separate procurement cycles. One unified operating system collapses both decisions into one budget event with stacked savings.
Key Terms
Synchronous Replication

Storage architecture in which every block is written to multiple servers simultaneously. The write acknowledges only after all replicas land, eliminating the rebuild storms and parity-calculation windows that plague closed RAID architectures.

RF2 / RF3

VergeOS replication factors. RF2 keeps two synchronous copies and tolerates the loss of any one drive or host (N+1). RF3 keeps three synchronous copies and tolerates the simultaneous loss of any two drives or hosts (N+2). RF3 is the baseline for production workloads on refurbished media.

ioGuardian (N+X)

VergeOS active-service capability that absorbs concurrent failures beyond the base replication factor’s mathematical tolerance. Surviving replicas serve data at full performance during background re-replication, eliminating the secondary-failure window that turns a single hardware event into a service outage.

R2v3 Certification

The Responsible Recycling Standard, version 3, governs certified refurbishment and remarketing of electronic equipment. R2v3-certified suppliers maintain serialized inventory, documented sanitization processes, and verifiable provenance, which is the procurement floor for refurbished enterprise SSDs.

The Architectural Defense: Refurbished Media Becomes a Non-Event

The financial case is strong. The architectural objection is the question that stops most CFOs from approving the play. Refurbished drives carry a statistically higher failure probability than new drives, and the last thing any infrastructure team wants is a procurement decision that turns into a 2 a.m. outage. The right response to elevated drive failure probability is not avoidance. It is architecture that absorbs the elevated failure rate without service impact.

Live Webinar · May 7, 2026
Solve the Storage Crisis with Refurbished Enterprise Drives

George Crump and Aaron Richman walk the procurement framework, the architecture, and the migration sequencing in 45 minutes. Live Q&A included.

Register Now →

VergeOS protects data with synchronous replication, not RAID. Every block writes to multiple servers simultaneously. The write acknowledges only after all replicas land. There is no parity calculation, no rebuild process running across surviving spindles, no extended window where a single additional failure causes data loss. RF3 on VergeOS keeps three synchronous copies of every block across separate hosts, and the architecture mathematically tolerates the simultaneous loss of any two drives or hosts.

ioGuardian extends that tolerance further. The active-service capability keeps surviving replicas running at full performance during the re-replication window, eliminating the secondary-failure exposure that turns a single hardware event into a service outage on legacy systems. One VergeOS customer ran an RF2 cluster with ioGuardian protection across six servers. During a single incident, four of the six servers went down simultaneously. RF2 mathematically tolerates exactly one host failure. The math says the cluster should have suffered catastrophic data loss. The cluster experienced zero downtime and zero data loss. ioGuardian absorbed three concurrent failures beyond the base replication factor’s tolerance.

That magnitude of architectural over-engineering renders refurbished media failure rates irrelevant. A correlated batch failure across drives from the same lease cycle is the kind of event that would destroy a parity-based RAID set. On VergeOS with RF3 and ioGuardian, the same event is absorbed without service impact. The refurbished SSD strategy is not gambling on drive quality. It is deploying capacity in an architecture that does not depend on individual drive reliability.

SAN Refresh Comparison: Closed Architecture vs. VergeOS Arbitrage

 Closed Architecture RefreshVergeOS Arbitrage Refresh
Storage mediaNew flash, vendor-locked modulesRefurbished enterprise SSDs, commodity hardware
Pricing vs. 2025 list70 percent above 2025 listBelow 2025 list, competitive with 2024 pricing
Capacity expansion targetReduced to fit 2024 budgetOriginal target maintained
Failure protection modelParity-based RAID with rebuild stormsSynchronous replication with N+X ioGuardian
Hypervisor licensingVMware renewal at multi-fold increaseVergeOS integrated, no separate hypervisor cost
Migration fundingSeparate CapEx request, deferredFunded by hardware cost delta on the refresh

The Procurement Floor: How to Qualify Suppliers Without Gambling

The architectural defense answers the technical objection. The procurement objection is the practical one. How does a storage architect actually qualify suppliers without taking a position on every drive that arrives at the loading dock? The answer is the six-part intake framework, which converts refurbished SSD purchasing from a coin flip into a repeatable process.

The framework runs in sequence. R2v3 certification verifies the supplier’s chain of custody and serialized inventory. NIST 800-88 sanitization certificates confirm compliant data destruction on the drives entering the data center. Fraud detection verifies matching serials and retail firmware against rebadged OEM drives. SMART diagnostics baseline the seven attributes that matter for endurance and reliability. Firmware validation confirms the drives run vendor-released code, not modified or counterfeit firmware. Stress testing proves sustained-workload performance under realistic conditions.

The framework is the work. The savings are the reward. A SAN refresh built on this procurement floor delivers the cost advantage of the secondary market without importing the failure modes of the lower-tier suppliers, and it does so on a repeatable schedule that scales with the rest of the operational plan.

One Budget Cycle, Two Wins

Digital White Paper
Solve the Storage Crisis with Refurbished Enterprise Drives

The full framework. Fifteen sections covering the secondary market, the four risk categories, the six-part procurement funnel, and the VergeOS architecture that absorbs the residual risk.

Get the Paper →

The 2026 storage cost crisis is real. The VMware renewal pressure is real. The combination is what makes most infrastructure teams flinch and defer. The SAN refresh that pays for the VMware exit changes the financial calculation by stacking the savings rather than running them as separate decisions.

The procurement framework qualifies the drives. The architecture absorbs the risk. The cost delta funds the migration. The refresh costs less than it would have last year. The exit pays for itself. None of the three components work in isolation. All three deployed together produce a budget outcome that no other combination of vendors can match in the current supply environment.

The May 7 webinar walks through this play with real numbers. Register for the webinar.

Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a SAN refresh on VergeOS with refurbished enterprise SSDs cost compared to a new flash refresh in 2026?
Refurbished enterprise SSDs sell at 40 to 60 percent below 2026 new flash list pricing. A VergeOS refresh on commodity x86 servers with qualified refurbished SSDs runs at a fraction of the cost of a closed-architecture refresh. The exact savings depend on cluster size and capacity targets, but the math typically produces a hardware line item that lands below 2025 list pricing for the same capacity. The May 7 webinar walks through three cluster sizes with real numbers.
Are refurbished enterprise SSDs reliable enough for production workloads?
Refurbished enterprise SSDs from R2v3-certified suppliers carry 80 to 95 percent of their rated write life and ship with 7,000 or more terabytes written endurance ratings intact. They include power-loss protection, premium NAND binning, and the architectural features that consumer drives lack. The reliability case rests on two pillars: a six-part procurement framework that filters out fraud and OEM firmware lock, and an architecture that absorbs the residual failure rate without service interruption.
Can VergeOS pool existing legacy storage with newly procured refurbished SSDs?
Yes. VergeOS pools heterogeneous storage media seamlessly. Existing legacy flash continues serving production capacity alongside newly procured refurbished enterprise drives in the same cluster. The architecture treats hardware as commodity substrate, not as a procurement constraint. The flexibility is a critical part of the financial case for the VMware exit, since it eliminates the requirement to purchase 100 percent new storage as part of the migration.
Does the architectural strategy work with RF2, or does it require RF3?
RF3 is the baseline recommendation for production workloads on refurbished media. It tolerates the simultaneous loss of any two drives or hosts, and combined with ioGuardian it absorbs additional concurrent failures beyond the mathematical N+2 tolerance. RF2 with ioGuardian works for capacity-sensitive deployments and has a documented customer record of surviving four-of-six host failures with zero data loss. The choice depends on workload criticality and capacity targets.
What does the VMware migration look like operationally?
The VergeOS cluster runs alongside the VMware estate during the migration window. Workloads move in waves on a schedule the customer controls. The new platform absorbs production traffic as the old platform is decommissioned. The hardware cost delta from the SAN refresh provides the budget headroom for the licensing and migration services line items, which removes the financial barrier that defers most VMware exit decisions in the first place.

Filed Under: Storage Tagged With: flash inflation, ioGuardian, refurbished SSDs, RF3, SAN Refresh, secondary market, VergeOS, VMware exit

May 4, 2026 by George Crump

Live Webinar · May 2026
Flexibility at Scale

See the Storware-VergeOS architecture demonstrated live, including cross-hypervisor recovery and the four-of-six failure proof point. Live Q&A included.

Register Now →

Most VMware exit data protection plans treat the backup tier as a hand-me-down decision. The team picks a destination hypervisor, builds the migration runbook, and assumes the existing backup product will follow the workloads to wherever they land. That assumption is the source of more transition-window pain than any other architectural choice.

The reason is simple. A VMware-exit migration is rarely a single cutover event. Tier-two workloads move first because their dependencies are simple. Critical workloads stay on VMware longer because of NSX rules, custom backup hooks, vendor support contracts, and operational muscle memory. The result is a weeks-to-months-long parallel-operation window in which production data lives on the source hypervisor, the destination hypervisor, or both. A backup infrastructure that only knows how to talk to one of those hypervisors becomes a second migration project on top of the first.

Key Takeaways
The transition window is the hard part. Most VMware customers run two hypervisors for months. Backup tooling that only handles one creates a second migration project.
Two independent layers beat any single product. Infrastructure resilience and long-term retention are different problems with different failure modes.
96 percent of ransomware attacks now target backup repositories. Immutability has to exist at both the infrastructure and backup layers.
Cross-hypervisor recovery is a planned capability, not an emergency procedure. The right backup vendor lets a VMware workload land on VergeOS as a migration step.

VMware Exit Data Protection Starts in the Transition Window

VMware exit data protection — split-hypervisor transition window diagramGartner’s planning data projects that 55 percent of enterprises will be in proof-of-concept evaluations of VMware alternatives by 2028. Industry reporting on VMware price increases under Broadcom shows a range from 50 percent to over 1,000 percent for affected customers. CloudBolt’s 2024 survey found 99 percent of IT decision-makers reporting concern about the acquisition’s impact. These three numbers explain why the migration question is no longer optional for most VMware shops. They do not explain why the backup tier needs to be redesigned alongside it.

The redesign argument comes from operational reality. A team running two hypervisors needs backup tooling that runs against both hypervisors with the same policies, recovery procedures, and retention horizon. Anything less produces parallel backup operations, parallel recovery rehearsals, and parallel staff training. The cost shows up in the transition window, where the team is already managing two infrastructure platforms.

A backup vendor built for heterogeneous environments removes that cost. The same Server, the same policy model, and the same recovery workflow apply to both sides of the migration. The architectural decision is not which backup product is best in isolation. The decision is which backup product survives the transition without forcing a second migration. This shift has been characterized as the chance to rebuild data protection alongside the hypervisor exit, not after it.

“Heterogeneous environments are the norm now, not the exception.” — Paweł Mączka, CTO, Storware. April 2026.

Two Layers, Not One Consolidated Product

Multi-layer infrastructure data protection model spanning VergeOS and StorwareSingle-product VMware exit data protection fails one of two tests. Infrastructure-only protection lives inside the virtualization platform. It handles hardware failures and operational continuity well, but offers no compliance retention, no air-gapped immutability, and limited defense against ransomware targeting the production cluster itself. Backup-only protection can take minutes to hours to recover after a hardware event and depends entirely on backup scheduling for meaningful protection.

The architecture that survives both modes places independent layers at each level of the stack. Layer one handles real-time resilience. Layer two handles long-term retention and ransomware recovery. The two layers operate independently and reinforce each other.

VergeOS handles layer one. Replication Factors distribute data across cluster nodes as a distributed mirror. ioGuardian sits beside RF and actively serves data during failures rather than only accelerating repair. A production VergeOS cluster running RF2 with ioGuardian survived the failure of four of six servers, with zero downtime and zero data loss. ioClone produces fully independent snapshots of entire instances or specific VMs as read-only objects an attacker cannot modify. Global inline deduplication runs across the cluster, so snapshots and replication do not consume duplicate capacity.

Storware Backup and Recovery handles layer two, and the architectural fit is deliberate. For deeper context on how the platform layer drives recovery readiness, see our companion piece on how VergeOS and the backup tier split the DR job.

Key Terms
Replication Factor (RF)

VergeOS data resilience model. RF2 distributes data across cluster nodes as a distributed mirror. RF3 distributes data as a triple mirror.

ioGuardian

VergeOS technology that actively serves data during cluster failures rather than only accelerating repair. Survived four-of-six node loss with zero downtime in a production customer environment.

ioClone

VergeOS independent snapshot mechanism. Produces full copies of entire instances, virtual data centers, or individual VMs as read-only objects with no parent dependencies.

Universal License

Storware licensing model under which a single agreement covers all supported hypervisors and platforms. Removes the per-platform billing barrier during a hypervisor migration.

V2V Conversion

Virtual-to-virtual migration capability that recovers a workload backed up from one hypervisor onto a different destination hypervisor. Critical during transition windows.

Why Consider Storware as a Layer-Two Partner

Storware is a data protection platform built specifically for the multi-hypervisor world that VMware-exit migrations create. Breadth is the architectural feature. The platform supports VMware, VergeOS, Proxmox, Nutanix AHV, Red Hat Virtualization, OpenStack, oVirt, KubeVirt, and several KVM variants under a single management plane. A team running two hypervisors during a transition window manages one product, one policy model, and one recovery workflow rather than two of each.

The licensing model reinforces the architecture. Storware operates on a universal license that covers all supported platforms under one agreement. Protecting both VMware and VergeOS during the parallel-operation window produces no additional license fee. The transition becomes a budgeted operational state rather than a billing event.

The integration with VergeOS is direct and documented. The Storware Server holds metadata, exposes a RESTful API, and manages policies. The Storware Node deploys as a VM inside the VergeOS cluster or as an external system with network access. Backup jobs use VergeOS ioClone snapshots as the source, read through an NFSv4 share served by a VergeOS NAS service, and apply changed block tracking so incremental jobs transfer only changed data. Synthetic forever-incremental support consolidates the backup chain at the destination, removing the need for periodic full re-runs against production. Supported destinations include NFS, SMB, S3 and Azure Blob object storage, Dell PowerProtect Data Domain via DD Boost, and tape.

Cross-hypervisor recovery is the capability that pays off the design. Storware supports V2V conversion across several platform pairs, including VMware-to-OpenStack and several KVM-based combinations. A workload protected on VMware can be recovered onto VergeOS as a planned migration step rather than as an emergency procedure. An architect builds a parallel VergeOS cluster on existing hardware, recovers protected VMware VMs onto that cluster through Storware, and validates the recovery before committing to migration. The data path during this kind of staged recovery is the same one used in production, so the operation is rehearsed, not improvised.

The Ransomware Layer Is the Real Test

Ransomware reshaped what backup means. The numbers explain why the architecture has to change.

96%
of ransomware attacks target backup repositories (Veeam 2024)
94%
independent targeting rate confirmed by Sophos (2024)
35%
of orgs expecting hours-long recovery actually achieve it (Backblaze 2024)

Two-layer immutability defense for VMware exit data protectionThe numbers point to a single architectural answer. A backup that lives in the same trust domain as production has been compromised by definition once an attacker reaches the production system. Immutability has to exist at both layers. ioClone snapshots inside VergeOS are read-only by default and can be set to immutable by checking a box. As a result, they cannot be modified by an attacker who reaches the production cluster. Storware adds immutable storage targets, such as S3 Object Lock and Data Domain Retention Lock, outside the cluster trust domain. Recovery from in-cluster snapshots is near-instant. Recovery from the Storware tier is slower but provides the long-term retention horizon for compliance and forensic analysis.

Practical implementation is straightforward. Use ioClone snapshots for short-window recovery, typically 30 minutes to 30 days. Use Storware backups with immutable destinations for the long-term horizon, typically a year or longer, depending on compliance requirements. Test both monthly. The 25-point gap in Backblaze’s data between expected and actual recovery times is directly attributable to how often teams rehearse.

Who Owns Which Layer

 VergeOS (Layer 1)Storware (Layer 2)
Hardware failure resiliencePrimary—
In-cluster snapshot protectionPrimary—
Long-term retention—Primary
Cross-hypervisor recoverySupportsPrimary
Air-gapped immutable storage—Primary
Ransomware-resistant snapshotsPrimarySupports
Universal multi-platform licensing—Primary

The VMware Exit Data Protection Decision

VMware exit data protection in 2026 is no longer a single-product decision. The infrastructure stack is being rebuilt under transition pressure. The data protection tier needs to span source and destination platforms during that transition. The cost of getting either layer wrong is measured in budget cycles. The architecture that survives places independent protection at each level and treats the transition window as a planned operational state.

For architects evaluating this design, the practical next step is a paired proof-of-concept on existing hardware. Stand up a small VergeOS cluster, deploy a Storware Server and Node against it, protect a VMware VM, and recover it onto VergeOS through Storware. A week with the running system communicates more than any document.

The full white paper, Resilience Without Lock-In, walks through the complete two-layer architecture, the Storware reference implementation against VergeOS 4.13 and higher, sizing recommendations for the NAS service, cross-hypervisor recovery scenarios, and the role-by-role comparison of which product owns which layer. Read the white paper →

Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the backup tier need to be redesigned during a VMware exit?
A VMware exit produces a months-long transition window where production data lives on two hypervisors at once. A backup tier that only knows how to talk to one of them creates a second migration project on top of the first. Heterogeneous backup tooling lets one product, one policy model, and one recovery workflow span both sides of the move.
What is the two-layer protection model?
Layer one handles real-time resilience against hardware failure and operational error through the infrastructure platform itself. Layer two handles long-term retention, granular recovery, and ransomware defense through an independent backup product. The two layers operate independently and reinforce each other against different failure modes.
Why is Storware a fit as the layer-two partner for VergeOS?
Storware supports VMware, VergeOS, Proxmox, Nutanix AHV, Red Hat Virtualization, OpenStack, oVirt, KubeVirt, and several KVM variants under one universal license. That breadth means a transition team manages one backup product across both hypervisors with no additional license fee during the parallel-operation window.
How does the architecture defend against ransomware?
Immutability sits at both layers. ioClone snapshots inside VergeOS are read-only objects an attacker cannot modify. Storware adds immutable storage targets such as S3 Object Lock and Data Domain Retention Lock outside the cluster trust domain. In-cluster recovery is near-instant. Storware-tier recovery is slower but provides the long-term retention horizon for compliance and forensic analysis.
What is cross-hypervisor recovery and why does it matter?
Cross-hypervisor recovery uses V2V conversion to recover a workload backed up from one hypervisor onto a different destination hypervisor. A workload protected on VMware can be recovered onto VergeOS as a planned migration step rather than as an emergency procedure, letting an architect validate the recovery before committing to migration.

Filed Under: Protection Tagged With: dataprotection, IT infrastructure, ransomware, storware-webinar-campaign

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