Feature: hot tips for virtualisation

 
Page 3 of 3 | Single page
Buying as much server memory and processor power as you can afford is a good way to avoid performance issues in the first place, says the RCP’s Venning. “The network traffic between the server and the client is often tiny – ­ it is the traffic between the servers that is high,” he says.

Colfescu says firms do not necessarily have to install new servers to handle virtualisation, depending on what they have already and how it fits alongside the virtualisation software licensing requirements.

“Everything can be re-used ­ – the network, servers, network interface cards ­ – but a lot comes down to the product you select because some are licensed by socket, some by core, and some per server,” he says.

Colfescu says companies interested in virtualising their infrastructure for the first time should make optimum use of capacity planning software, either those supplied by the virtualisation vendors themselves or third-party products.

“The figures come out slightly different with each one and might tell you that you need ‘x’ amount of servers for a particular task, but it is still worth using them,” he says.

Server virtualisation options

VMware

VMware has quickly grown to dominate the server virtualisation market. It now claims to have more than 120,000 paying enterprise customers around the world. VMware offers a range of server and desktop virtualisation tools, along with management tools.

Microsoft

Microsoft only came to market with a viable server virtualisation solution, Hyper-V, as part of its Windows Server 2008 release earlier this year. The management aspect of Hyper-V is handled by the latest version of Microsoft’s Systems Center systems management

software.

Xen

Xen is an open-source software virtualisation hypervisor first released under general public licence in 2003. It has been integrated into various open-source products including the Novell distribution of Suse Linux Enterprise Server and Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux 5. The firm XenSource sells management products around the Xen hypervisor, and was acquired by thin client veteran Citrix. Citrix’s XenServer 5 product is now based on what was previously XenSource’s XenEnterprise product.

Copyright © 2010 Computing


Feature: hot tips for virtualisation
 
 
 
 
 
Top Stories
Vito Forte: A CIO for tough times
Fortescue Metals CIO talks vendor management and innovation.
 
Telstra shifts BigPond email to Windows Live
All data to be migrated to Microsoft cloud.
 
Vodafone Australia churn nears half a million for 2011
British joint owners 'not pleased'.
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
Polls
Would you be concerned about your business' email data being hosted offshore?

   |   View results
Yes
  85%
 
No
  15%
TOTAL VOTES: 228

Vote