Coming soon: Microsoft System Center 2019!

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Microsoft Windows Server Team

This blog post was authored by Vithalprasad Gaitonde, Principal PM Manager, System Center.


As customers grow their deployments in the public cloud and on-premises data centers, management tools are evolving to meet customer needs. System Center suite continues to play an important role in managing the on-premises data center and the evolving IT needs with the adoption of the public cloud.


Today, I am excited to announce that Microsoft System Center 2019 will be generally available in March 2019. System Center 2019 enables deployment and management of Windows Server 2019 at a larger scale to meet your data center needs.


System Center 2019 has been in private preview through the Windows Server Technical Adoption Program (TAP) customers since December 2018. A big thank you to everyone who have given us feedback so far.


I would like to take a moment and give you an overview about the new release. System Center 2019 has the following areas of focus:

  • First-class tools to monitor and manage data centers
  • Support and manage capabilities in the latest versions of Windows Server
  • Enable hybrid management and monitoring capabilities with Azure

System Center 2019 is our LTSC (Long Term Servicing Channel) release and provides the 5 years of standard and 5 years of extended support that customers can rely on. Subsequent to the GA of System Center 2019, the suite will continue to accrue value through the Update Rollup releases every six months over the mainstream support window of 5 years.


System Center 2019 is designed to deliver value in the following areas:

Hybrid


As enterprise environments now span on-premises to the cloud, customers look to leverage the innovation in Azure services using their on-premises tools. To enable this, we have integrated System Center with a set of management services in Azure to augment the on-premises tools.

  • With Service Map integration with System Center Operations Manager (SCOM), you can automatically create distributed application diagrams in Operations Manager (OM) that are based on the dynamic dependency maps in Service Map.
  • With Azure Management Pack, you can now view perf and alert metrics in SCOM, integrate with web application monitoring in Application Insights, and monitor more PaaS services, such as Azure Blob Storage, Azure Data Factory, etc.
  • Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) 2019 enables simplified patching of VMs by integrating with Azure Update Management.

Dashboard-for-Azure-resources-in-SCOM-web-console.png


Dashboard for Azure resources in SCOM web console

Security


With the security threats growing in number and sophistication, security continues to be top priority for customers.

  • System Center products now support service logon and shun the dependency on interactive logon aligning with security best practice.
  • VMM 2019 now includes a new role, VM administrator, which provides just enough permissions for read-only visibility into the fabric of the data center, but prevents escalation of privilege to fabric administration.

VM-Administrator-Role-in-VMM.png


VM Administrator Role in VMM

Software defined data center


Hyper Converged Infrastructure (HCI) is a significant trend in on-premises data centers today. Customers see lowered costs by using their servers with high performant local disks to run compute and storage needs at the same time.

  • With VMM 2019, you can manage and monitor HCI deployment more efficiently – from upgrading or patching Storage Spaces Direct clusters without downtime to monitoring the health of disks.
  • VMM 2019 storage optimization enables you to optimize placement of VHDs across cluster shared volumes and prevents VM outages caused when the storage runs full.

Storage-Health-in-VMM.png


Storage Health in VMM

Modernizing operations and monitoring


Customers have come to rely on SCOM for its extensibility and the ecosystem of management packs to monitor Microsoft and third-party workloads.

  • With HTML5 dashboards and drill down experiences in the SCOM web console, you will now be able to use a simplified layout and extend the monitoring console using custom widget and SCOM REST API.
  • Taking modernization a step further, email notifications in SCOM have been modernized as well with support for HTML-email in SCOM 2019.
  • SCOM 2019 brings a new alerts experience for monitor-based alerts whereby alerts have to be attended to and cannot be simply closed by operators when the respective underlying monitors are in unhealthy state.
  • SCOM has enhanced your Linux monitoring by leveraging Fluentd; and now is resilient to management server failovers in your Linux environments.
  • All the SCOM management packs will now support Windows Server 2019 roles and features.

SCOM-web-console-e1551978458464.png


SCOM web console

Faster backups with Data Protection Manager 2019


Data Protection Manager (DPM) 2019 will provide backups optimized in time (faster) and space (consumes less storage).

  • DPM improves performance of your backups with a 75 percent increase in speed and enables monitoring experience for key backup parameters via Log Analytics.
  • DPM further supports backup of VMware VMs to tape. In addition to Windows Server 2019, DPM now provides backups for new workloads such as SharePoint 2019 and Exchange 2019.

DPM-Alerts-and-Reports-using-Log-Analytics-1024x403.png


DPM alerts and reports using Log Analytics

Orchestrator 2019 and Service Manager 2019


Orchestrator 2019 supports PowerShell V 4.0 and above, enabling you to run 64-bit cmdlets. Service Manager 2019 will ship with an improved Active Directory (AD) connector that is now capable of synchronizing with a specific domain controller.

Changes to release cadence


Finally, we are making changes to System Center release cadence to optimize the way we are delivering new features. System Center has two release trains today LTSC and SAC. There is also a release train called Update Rollups (URs).


Most of our customers use Long Term Servicing Channel (LTSC) like System Center 2016 to run their data center infrastructures. LTSC provides five years of mainstream support and five years of extended support with Update Rollups (UR) providing the incremental fixes and updates. From talking to customers, we learned that LTSC works better for most System Center deployments as the update cycles are longer and more stable.


Based on the learnings, we will start to focus our resources on innovation plans for System Center in LTSC releases and stop SAC releases. System Center 2019 will support upgrades from two prior SAC releases so customers running System Center 1801 or System Center 1807 will be able to upgrade to System Center 2019; just as System Center 2016 can be upgraded to System Center 2019.


System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) is not impacted by the 2019 release change and will continue current branch release cadence of three times per year as noted in the documentation, “Support for Configuration Manager current branch versions.”

Call to action


In March, customers will have access to System Center 2019 through all the channels! We will publish a blog post to mark the availability of System Center 2019 soon. As always, we would love to hear what capabilities and enhancements youd like to see in our future releases. Please share your suggestions, and vote on submitted ideas, through ourUserVoice channels.

Frequently asked questions


Q: When will I be able to download the System Center 2019?


A: System Center 2019 will be generally available in March 2019. We will update this blog to inform that the build is available for download through the Volume Licensing Service Center (VLSC).


Q: Is there any change in pricing for System Center 2019?


A: No.


Q: Will there be a new Semi-Annual Channel release along with System Center 2019?


A: No. There will not be Semi-Annual Channel releases, but new features before the next Long-Term Servicing Channel (LTSC) release will be delivered through Update Rollups.


The post Coming soon: Microsoft System Center 2019! appeared first on Windows Server Blog.

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