News

DMTF Hammers Out SMASH 2.0

The Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF), an industry organization advocating the development of interoperable server management, has released Systems Management Architecture for Server Hardware 2.0. The latest version of the SMASH initiative provides various specifications for streamlined management.

The previous spec, version 1.0, offered a standardized command line protocol for local and remote management of multiple servers in a data center, regardless of machine state, operating system, server system topology or access method. SMASH 2.0 extends the initiative with support for programmatic interfaces and Web services. It pulls this off by leveraging DMTF technologies such as Web Services for Management (WS-Management) and Common Information Model (CIM).

WS-Management leverages Web services as a common method for systems to access and exchange management data. CIM provides a common definition of management information for systems, networks, apps and services to foster easier exchange of information between systems from various vendors.

SMASH is getting active support from representatives of firms such as AMD, Dell, HP and Hitachi, as well as IBM.

"With the introduction of Web services-based management for heterogeneous server platforms, SMASH represents a significant advancement in interoperable systems management," said Tom Bradicich, IBM Fellow and vice president for IBM's Systems Technology, Blade, Rack and x86 Servers, in a prepared statement.

DMTF has more than 4,000 active participants from nearly 200 organizations and works to promote interoperable management standards for enterprise solutions.

About the Author

David Kopf is a freelance technology writer and editor.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • .NET 11 Preview 6 Roundup: ASP.NET Core, MAUI, C#, EF Core and SDK Updates

    Microsoft's sixth .NET 11 preview advances async validation, C# unions, cross-platform UI controls, database queries, testing tools, Native AOT and container images.

  • Low-Coding in the Age of AI: Dataverse Embraces Copilot, Claude and Cursor

    Microsoft is extending Dataverse into coding-agent marketplaces while expanding its MCP tools, certification program and governance controls.

  • Visual Studio Takes Aim at Copilot Billing Shock

    Beyond Copilot usage visibility, the June update delivers several other enhancements centered on AI-assisted development, security and quality-of-life improvements. Here's a quick rundown of the remaining additions announced by Microsoft.

  • Claude AI Gets Yet Another Boost in VS Code 1.128

    The July 8, 2026, Visual Studio Code update expands agent workflows, chat attachments, browser-tab controls, OS-level shortcuts and enterprise telemetry management.

Subscribe on YouTube