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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedReflections on virtualization for the SMB
Computer Technology Review, Spring, 2007 by Mark Ferelli
In both the server and storage industries, the potential for business in serving small to medium businesses can be substantial. For many vendors, it is uncharted territory and an appreciation of the pain points of the SMB is a key action item.
It is all too tempting to look at the SMB as just a smaller version of the enterprise data center. But the yawning difference between the SMB and the enterprise in terms of the delta in budgetary resources, staffing resources, legacy resources and the IT mission makes this vision difficult to sustain.
Where commonality does exist is in the requirement for the efficient and cost-effective use of servers and storage. Both the SMB and the enterprise are increasingly committed to cost reduction and consolidation in server and storage acquisition and operation. Consolidation in particular is popular, since it represents the use of less space, less electricity, and fewer hours and personnel committed to management of the assets.
To attain these lofty goals, the SMB can now look to virtualization as a strategy. Properly applied, virtualization reduces total cost of operation and boosts performance of the assets that have been virtualized.
Server Virtualization
For purposes of this discussion, virtualization comes in two flavors: server and storage. Server virtualization creates a level of abstraction permitting a single computer to act as several computers. It gives the user the impression that multiple servers exist on a single box. Each server session enjoys its own dedicated memory space, dedicated storage space and emulated processor.
There are two major applications offering server virtualization support. One is Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 (For the desktop, Microsoft offers Virtual PC, which came to the Redmond giant with the acquisition of Connectix. This was the same implementation that allowed Mac systems to run DOS type sessions to achieve cross platform compatibility.) The other is VMware, the godfather of server virtualization applications running a broad series of operating systems.
Other major virtualization applications are available from companies such as SWsoft and XenSource, although they represent a small piece of the virtualization pie. There also are tools that can be used for deploying virtual servers, migrating servers and protecting servers aside from those offered by the virtualization vendors themselves, such as Acronis True Image and Acronis Full Circle. In addition to migrating from the physical to virtual environments, these tools also can be used to migrate from a virtual server to a dissimilar hardware-based virtual server or from a virtual server back to a physical server. Working together, the Acronis tools also can be used for backup and disaster recovery of virtual servers in an SMB and enterprise environment.
Most recently, VMware has taken aggressive steps to bring server virtualization to the SMB, focusing on that key SMB requirement: Ease of use. VMware Server, VMware's low-end virtual generator, has been free since July 2006. Some 70% of its 1.2 million downloads is reported to have gone to small or medium-sized businesses. To satisfy that essential ease of use requirement, VMware is offering VirtualCenter for VMware Server.
VirtualCenter is a single management console for configuring, provisioning, and managing virtual machines. It includes a high-availability module and a VMotion virtual machine module that migrates from one physical server box to another. It also includes a dynamic resource allocation module for assigning memory, CPU duty cycles, and network bandwidth between virtual machines on a pool of physical servers. The SMB version of VirtualCenter is restricted to the VMware Server, an older form of virtual server technology that translates virtual machine needs through the physical server's operating system.
Storage Virtualization
Storage virtualization is well defined in Tom Clark's definitive work Storage Virtualization: "the logical abstraction of physical storage systems and thus, when well implemented, hides the complexity of physical storage devices and their specific requirements from management view." Even a basic understanding of virtualization delivers both data center manager and SMB multiple benefits: a better handle on downtime, better general storage performance, fewer problems of lost data, and the ability to aggregate storage devices, delivering best use of storage assets.
The need for storage virtualization appears, as a rule, when it is necessary for the SMB to implement a storage area network (SAN). This determination is often a function of the amount of data to be stored. If storage requirements require more than 2 TB, a SAN is widely considered by IT professionals to be the preferred solution to direct- or network-attached storage. This is because SANs allow storage scaling over time and provides such benefits as high availability, high performance, scalability and ease of management.
