Archive for the ‘VMware’ Category

Hyper-V3 may give VMWare a run for its money this year

 

VMware has the quality, market share, and price-point of a high-end IT industry leader.  It also sits in between the hardware layer and the OS layer, a position that our friends in Redmond do not like to share with anyone if they can help it.   Looks like 2012 may be the year that Microsoft gets serious about competition in this space with HyperV3.  Some good technical stuff from Julio Urquidi  here.  Also see this good piece from Beth Pariseau for some insight into the details below.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Virtualization 2012: Hyper-V 3 vs. vSphere 5 showdown looms

Beth Pariseau, Senior News Writer, SearchServerVirtualization.com

Microsoft’s Hyper-V has been making steady progress catching up to VMware for years, but as IT pros look ahead into 2012, they see the battle between these two virtualization vendors heating up like never before.

In one corner: VMware vSphere 5, made generally available in August, and capable of supporting up to 1 TB of RAM and 32 virtual CPUs per virtual machine (VM). Other new features include Auto Deploy, which can automatically provision hosts according to user-defined rules; overhauled High Availability (rechristened Fault Domain Manager); policy-driven storage provisioning; and Storage Distributed Resource Scheduler.

In the other corner: Microsoft Hyper-V 3.0, still at the developer preview stage. If released as planned before the end of 2012, however, it will contain several key features to bring it into closer competition with vSphere. Those features include a new extensible virtual switch (which has received Cisco’s pledge of support), true live storage migration, shared-nothing live migration, and new scalability with up to 32 virtual CPUs and 512 GB of memory — up from a limit of 4 vCPUs and 64 GB of RAM.

Read the full story here.


IBM making moves towards private cloud with Tivoli Updates

Carl Brooks of searchCloudComputing.com just put out an interesting piece on IBM’s updating as Tivoli as a complement and perhaps a replacement for VMware in the building of private clouds. The industry seems to be taking some notice of IBM’s approach to the cloud, finally.

IBM

 

Did IBM just change the game in private cloud?

By Carl Brooks, Senior Technology Writer

02 Mar 2011 | searchCloudComputing.com

Does IBM have the wherewithal to compete in the commodity hardware cloud?

Say “IBM” and “cloud computing” in the same breath and many IT managers will roll their eyes. The IT leader’s cloud strategy has been seen by many as a mess.

But that may be about to change. IBM recently revealed a beta program of updates to its Tivoli software that may breathe new life into the company’s private cloud ambitions.

The new capabilities include support for VMware’s VIM APIs in a variety of Tivoli tools, including image repositories, automated provisioning, application deployment and Tivoli Storage Manager (integrating TSM and VMware heretofore has not been pretty). Enhancements to Tivoli Provisioning Manager may include booting VMware images directly from block storage instead of having them preloaded into memory. IBM claims that images can be booted in seconds.

Read the rest here.

Carl Brooks is the Senior Technology Writer for SearchCloudComputing.com. Contact him at cbrooks@techtarget.com.

 

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Virtualization Speed Traps: Five Ways to Drag Apps Down

As you virtualize more of your company’s applications, avoid these five mistakes that could kill application performance for users. One piece of bad news: Your IT staff will have to learn to play nicely.

As you virtualize more of your company’s applications, avoid these five mistakes that could kill application performance for users. One piece of bad news: Your IT staff will have to learn to play nicely.

By Kevin Fogarty, CIO.com

Computacenter – CIO — What has driven the market for virtual servers more than the potential to squeeze several servers worth of performance out of just one physical server? It’s the relative ease with which most applications can move from a physical infrastructure to a virtual one.

But make the move without planning, run into a few of the major performance “gotchas”, and your apps sitting on a brand-new virtual infrastructure will run like they’re locked in an old box that’s sitting around because it’s too much trouble to throw out. Here are five virtualization performance points to keep in mind.

1. Skimpy Hardware

Sure, one main purpose of virtualization is to make physical servers disappear, but that doesn’t mean the hardware itself doesn’t matter, says Ian Scanlon, IS operations manager for Computacenter (CCC), a datacenter and IT services company based in London but covering most of Europe.

Computacenter migrated the 700-plus servers running its internal IT operations to VMware beginning in 2007, and has had very few performance problems, even with applications very demanding of either I/O or computing resources, Scanlon says. All the VMs run on relatively high-end HP blade servers, with 48 GB of RAM and plenty of SAN space each. Without that elbow room, the data warehouse, SQL Server-based applications and other demanding systems might not pass muster with the business units, he says.

2. Weak Supporting Characters

Virtual servers definitely save money, but if you focus too much on cost savings when you’re setting them up, you’re not going to save money or get decent performance, Scanlon says. High-bandwidth network connections, fiber rather than copper, for example, and powerful SAN gear make far more sense than saving a few bucks in capital costs upfront, he says.

“We went into this [migration] with the goal of saving costs, initially, which we haven’t really done,” he says. “The benefits really are in agility, the amount of time it takes to stand up a new server or expand something, and making management easier and issues like that. We’re not really saving much, but I don’t think anyone here would say it was the wrong decision.”

According to CIO research, plenty of companies do see substantial savings from virtualization efforts, but they value agility gains just as much.

3. Downsized Support Plans

Everyone likes getting “free” servers by running several VMs on one physical box, but that doesn’t mean you’ve actually gotten rid of any of the load on your infrastructure, says Chris Wolf, analyst at the Burton Group. In fact, you’ve probably increased the load on your power, network and storage resources.

Five VMs on a physical host use the same amount of bandwidth and disk space as five physical servers, and require the same amount of configuration, security, management, licensing, patching and all the other work that goes into keeping one application or a whole data center running, Wolf says. Cutting your support plans or failing to plan increases to accommodate new VMs may not make a difference on day one of a migration, but software rot will quickly drag down performance.

4. Finger-Pointing Instead of Troubleshooting

In many companies with IT silos, people who don’t handle shared responsibility well will pass responsibility for anything running on a virtualized server to the “virtualization guy,” says Bob Quillan, senior director of marketing at EMC’s (EMC) Ionix division, which focuses on management of virtual infrastructures.

By creating another silo responsible for something that touches every other department in IT, companies set themselves up for extended rounds of finger-pointing—rather than troubleshooting when something goes wrong. Traditional IT groups aren’t used to the speed with which a virtual infrastructure changes (a condition EMC techs refer to as “V-Motion Sickness”) so they tend to blame problems first on that. Breaking down silos and working out triage and response procedures that work within a virtual environment as well as a physical one, is the only way to keep a small breakdown from becoming a big one, Quillan says.

5. Overcrowding Your Applications

The hypervisor, OS and hardware may all be the same between two VMs running on the same machine (or identical machines): but the applications running on them change the dynamics so completely that you have to continue planning capacity according to the demands of each application on each server, Scanlon says.

It’s easy to put half a dozen VMs running a normal application on one physical server, but only two VMs running an I/O-heavy SQL Server app or power-consuming data warehouse, he says.

Running Citrix virtual-application servers on a VM isn’t a problem either, unless you forget that the Citrix app itself is a virtual server whose resource demands will skyrocket when everyone who uses it logs in, if you haven’t tested it under real-world conditions, he says.

“We’ve had relatively few problems in performance since we migrated, but I think that’s mostly because we started with really good [hardware],” Scanlon says. “It kept us out of a lot of trouble.”

Get more story here.

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Cloud, Virtualization Gurus: What Title Should You Have?

What do you call cloud computing and virtualization experts? Job titles for IT people with these hot skill sets remain in flux, making it harder for specialists and employers to hook up, recruiters say.
Comments By Kevin Fogarty

CONNECTIONS
VMware Citrix  — CIO —

…If you are searching for a virtualization or cloud role, watch your search terms, she says.

Just using “virtualization” as a keyword, for example, pulled up 880 jobs on Dice.com on one day last week, for example, according to Bewley.

“However, there are another 900 jobs that include ‘VMware’ as a keyword with no mention of virtualization,” Bewley found. “That leads us to conclude that searching based on vendor is particularly important in virtualization jobs.”

Common terms for virtualization specialists include: Architect SAN/Virtualization; Citrix / VMware specialist or administrator; Data Center Virtualization Systems Analyst; and Product Manager for Large Scale Virtualization…

Read more here

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VMware vs. Citrix virtual desktops — what’s the better deal?

By Bridget Botelho, SearchVirtualDesktop.com

VMware may rule the server virtualization market today, but its VMware View 4 virtual desktop software falls short when compared with Citrix Systems’ XenDesktop 4 in terms of flexibility, capabilities and delivery, according to many experts.

Here, desktop virtualization consultants and users provide clarity on some of the major claims that Citrix Systems and VMware have made about their offerings and explain which gives IT pros the most value.

Flexibility for IT shops
At this point, some say that XenDesktop 4 is better option for big IT shops because it provides many different flavors of desktop virtualization, and it can run on any hypervisor, among other things.

Citrix recently released its Flexcast technology to let IT deliver any type of virtual desktop that end users need — not just the server- hosted version of virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) that VMware offers, said Jim Sanzone, a practice director for desktop and application virtualization at New York-based virtualization consulting firm Virtera.

“Citrix has recognized that there is no one silver bullet with desktop virtualization; you won’t solve all of your problems with just VDI,” said Sanzone, who offers both XenDesktop and VMware View. “There are elements — app streaming, presentation server, provisioning server – that don’t fit into a hosted desktop solution. So people like XenDesktop’s flexibility.”

Chris Wolf, a Burton Group virtualization analyst and consultant, concurred. “VMware needs to offer similar functionality to Citrix FlexCast, with the View broker able to connect users to a virtual desktop or XenApp/RDS session based on policy.”

Also, while XenDesktop runs on any hypervisor, VMware View 4.0 supports only VMware’s own vSphere and Virtual Infrastructure 3.5. VMware representatives claim that since more than 90% of the virtualization market runs VMware, this isn’t a problem. But enterprises may feel differently.

“VMware’s solution turns people off because of the lock-in factor,” Sanzone said. “Some organizations are OK with it, but others are interested in Hyper-V and, down the road, may want to use that. If they use VMware View, they can’t. That was a complaint from a very large customer recently.”

Wolf said he believes that VMware will support VMware View on other hypervisors when the market grows and people ask for it. But VMware has not indicated interest in this.

End-user experience
Since the end-user experience is critical to selling desktop virtualization to users, both companies improved their delivery protocols in the most recent versions.

VMware View 4 will offer a better end-user experience than before, thanks to integration with Teradici’s PC-over-IP protocol (PCoIP); a remote display protocol that creates the best-case performance for any network condition.

More on desktop virtualization:
VMware View 4: An improvement, but still a ways to go

Special series: What’s new with virtual desktop infrastructure?

Freakonomics: How H1N1 boosts desktop virtualization adoption

Symantec and Quest’s desktop virtualization suites hit the big leagues

Citrix to combine desktop virtualization products, lower costs

Prior to this, VMware was using Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), which was designed for Terminal Services, Sanzone said.

“Before, whenever a big company came to us with certain latency requirements, we knew View wouldn’t be able to handle that, but with PCoIP, [VMware] is on the table,” Sanzone said. “The expectation out in the field is that PCoIP will level the playing field against Citrix.”

Citrix also improved its protocol performance with HDX, which is built on Citrix’s well-regarded Independent Computing Architecture (ICA).

While there aren’t any nonpartisan, published comparisons of PCoIP vs. HDX available yet, the people interviewed for this article said Citrix’s HDX outperforms PCoIP on the wide area network.

“For simple, high-speed LAN desktops, in many cases you can’t really make a wrong choice because both perform well enough,” said Shannon Snowden, a consulting partner at Louisville, Ky.-based IT consultancy New Age Technologies Inc. “However, when the requirements include remote sites with more graphic-intensive applications, XenDesktop is hard to beat.”

Landon Winburn, a Citrix systems administrator at the University of Texas Medical Branch, agreed. Winburn uses VMware ESX on servers but chose Citrix’s XenDesktop 2 over VMware View 3 last year, in large part because Citrix’s ICA protocol was better for large deployments. He said that’s still true.

“Citrix has a tried and true protocol that works great on the WAN, where Teradici’s stuff just doesn’t work as well,” Winburn said. “It’s fine over a LAN, but that’s for smaller shops.”

Delivering personal settings
Another part of the end-user experience is personalization — being able to deliver desktops with all of an end user’s settings, images and desktop applications so the desktop looks and acts like a traditional PC.

Citrix includes personalization tools, or user profile management software, within XenDesktop 4 via sepagoPROFILE, but VMware does not include personalization software — yet. Instead, VMware has an OEM agreement with RTO Software for VMware View 4 today and plans to include it in a future version.

That said, Citrix’s personalization software is basic compared with available third-party offerings, and so many companies buy third-party software. Winburn, for instance, uses AppSense‘s personalization technology with XenDesktop.

Deployment
Desktop virtualization has a bad reputation for complexity, not just because it still requires IT shops to stitch together various software packages to get everything they want, but also because installation requires communication and cooperation among various IT departments.

“I have seen very high interest but very low adoption of desktop virtualization, and I attribute that to the technology being so across the board in terms of the disciplines required to put it all together,” Sanzone said. “The desktop, server, and application guys all have to come together and agree on something to make it happen.”

Although one could assume that VMware shops would lean toward VMware desktops, that isn’t necessarily the case. “So far, in the deployments we have done, Citrix has dominated the desktops — even though those customers use VMware in the data center,” Sanzone said.

That said, deploying XenDesktop in a VMware shop might take longer than VMware View — a point VMware emphasizes.

Patrick Harr, VMware’ s vice president of desktop marketing, said, “Citrix takes three times longer to install and integrate into an existing environment, and it requires up to six different management consoles compared to one easy-to-implement virtual desktop solution with one single management console with VMware View.”

But deployment times are subjective. “The difficulty in deployment argument is a relative thing,” said New Age Technologies’ Snowden. “For those familiar with XenDesktop, it’s no more difficult to deploy than View.”

Sanzone said XenDesktop may take a longer to deploy, “but that is because there are not as many features in VMware View.”

Pricing and TCO
VMware View 4.0, which will be available on Nov. 19, comes in two versions. VMware View 4 Enterprise Edition includes the Enterprise Edition of VMware vSphere 4 for free (for desktop use), together with VMware View Manager 4 for $150 per concurrent connection. The Premier Edition also includes VMware vSphere 4 for desktops and VMware View Manager 4, VMware ThinApp 4 and VMware View Composer for $250 per concurrent connection.

Citrix changed its licensing with XenDesktop 4 by integrating a full version of XenApp 5 into the product and moving from “per concurrent user” to “per named user” or “per-device” licensing. *The per-user model gives each end user an unlimited number of connected or offline devices at no additional cost, while the per-device model allows any number of end users to use one licensed device.

Whether the licensing change is good or bad depends on the company and how they use the technology.

The two editions of XenDesktop 4 that include XenApp are Enterprise and Platinum, and will be available Nov.16. Enterprise Edition costs $225 per user and includes secure remote access and application streaming. Platinum Edition costs $350 per user and includes secure remote access, application streaming and virtualization, Citrix Password Manager, virtual desktop performance monitoring, WAN Quality of Service, and remote user support.

XenDesktop also comes with XenServer, but the majority of XenDesktop users run it on VMware hypervisors, and they have to pay for ESX or vSphere separately. But vSphere’s memory-overcommit capability offers greater virtual machine (VM) density, so it makes a lot of sense to run XenDesktop on that hypervisor, Wolf said.

Both vendors make big claims surrounding total cost of ownership, but IT pros should not take the data at face value. For instance, Citrix claims that XenDesktop reduces desktop TCO by up to 40% and saves up to 90% in storage costs. VMware claims that View reduces desktop TCO by up to 60%, but that percentage is based on an IDC white paper paid for by VMware.

Burton Group’s Wolf said some of the big TCO savings numbers vendors tout are “laughable,” though desktop virtualization certainly does lower desktop management costs.

To get the most value out of either desktop virtualization offering, Wolf said he recommends buying packages that include application virtualization at a minimum.

And even though Citrix offers more today, the desktop virtualization space continues to evolve. Both Citrix and VMware plan to introduce client hypervisors by mid-2010, and VMware is experimenting with offline VDI capabilities. Citrix plans to release a self-service desktop application portal, Dazzle, by the end of this year that could reduce the number of IT help desk calls, Wolf said.

In the meantime, enterprises should base their decisions on their individual needs — not on biased vendor claims.

“There’s not a concrete answer as far as which is better; it all depends on the requirements. I find value in both offerings,” Snowden said. “So the best choice is really going to come down to the project requirements, complete with a detailed discovery of the desktop use profile, to determine which one is the best fit.”

Read more here.

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Cisco, EMC, VMware Join Forces for New vBlock Cloud Systems

Sharing the equity?

Sharing the equity?

The coalition — along with processor maker Intel — also announced that it is starting up a new, shared-equity company called Acadia to handle the specifics of marketing the new vBlock systems. vBlocks are preintegrated, preconfigured computing systems consisting of networkware from Cisco, storage/security/system management from EMC, and virtualization software from VMware.

Read more here.

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New Cloud Infrastructure Service Focuses on Enterprise Security

OpSource Cloud says it combines the best Amazon-like features (online sign-up, infrastructure provisioning in minutes, online community, etc.) with the enterprise security, performance and control your development projects and production applications require.

By Chris Kanaracus, CIO Magazine

Users get a dedicated “virtual private cloud” of resources, and can determine how much access it has to the public Internet, according to OpSource. The VPC can be connected with users’ on-premise data centers via a VPN (virtual private network) connection.

“You get a truly private ethernet network … only you have access to it. It doesn’t touch the public Internet. Nobody else can see it but the customer,” said CEO Treb Ryan.

OpSource isn’t the first cloud infrastructure vendor to pursue this concept. Amazon Web Services this week rolled out a similar feature, which is now in limited beta.

But OpSource has added a few other twists to its offering, such as the ability to set up role-based budgeting and user permissions, and both master and department-level management.

Without these finer-grained controls, IT managers could lose track of their cloud-service costs, Ryan said. “Someone could go and buy a bunch of extra capacity and then I end up with a $70,000 bill and I have no idea who did it,” he said.

In addition, OpSource is touting a 100 percent SLA (service level agreement) for the service, although Ryan acknowledged that such a promise can’t really be guaranteed. “What that says is we start incurring financial penalties [in the event of downtime],” he said.

Users also get 24-7 phone support and trouble ticket tracking, along with community support, and the service is compliant with SAS 70 auditing standards. Access is provided through a Web interface and a set of APIs (application programming interfaces).

Pricing isn’t finalized but will be overall “consistent with Amazon,” Ryan said [Update -- see price info here - ed].

While OpSource is comparatively small to AWS, it is partnering with Nippon Telegraph & Telephone on the network and infrastructure side, giving great potential for scale, Ryan said.

Read the whole story here or check out the service beta here.

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