Parallels Virtual Automation streamlines operations and reduces the complexity of managing physical and virtual servers — including containers and virtual machines. Through self-service and automation, administrators can lower costs and efficiently manage their infrastructure from anywhere.
Manage all physical servers and virtual environments seamlessly from a single management console
Create, modify, manage, delete, back-up applications and operating systems in single or batch mode
Templates reduce time to provision virtual environments to minutes
Isolated services running on each virtual environment
Ability to perform online/offline migration in preparation for planned maintenance
Greater accessibility to applications and services with fail-over clustering support
Graphically display current resource utilization of chosen virtual environments or obtain report of top resource consumers
Monitor and control network activities and settings to optimize each virtual environment
Ability to automate and schedule virtual environment backup
Online cloning to safely evaluate new software and patches before enterprise roll out
Centralized access control
Configure network services available for different containers
Parallels Virtual Automation includes Parallels Power Panel, a easy-to-use web-based tool for end users of container and virtual machines. With Parallels Power Panel end users can easily perform many critical management and administrative tasks without affecting other isolated containers/VMs on the server.
Start/Stop/Reboot container/VMs
Control containers/VMs with Start, Stop, Fast Stop, and Restart functions
Container/VM Services Management
Manage container services and processes such as stopping an unresponsive task or restarting a service
Container/VM Resource Monitoring
Monitor container/VM resource utilization for CPU, system, disk space and disk inodes
Backup/Restore container/VM
Back up and restore containers/VMs including all system and user files
Container/VM Repair
Start the container/VM in repair mode when a container/VM is broken and does not boot
Container/VM Re-install
Reinstall the container/VM from scratch, either saving or discarding existing files
Container/VM Actions Log
View the container/VM actions log to monitor resource shortage alerts and various container events
Embedded SSH or RDP Client
Connect via integrated SSH client (on Linux) or via Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP, on Windows) to the container/VM