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Published byDerick Bryant Modified over 9 years ago
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Adam Duffy Edina Public Schools
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The heart of virtualization is the “virtual machine” (VM), a tightly isolated software container with an operating system and application inside. Because each VM is completely separate and independent, many of them can run simultaneously on a single computer. A thin layer of software called a hypervisor decouples the VMs from the host, and dynamically allocates computing resources to each VM as needed.
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Why did we go with VMware vSphere? What other options are available? ◦ Microsoft Hyper-V ◦ Xen (Citrix XenServer) ◦ KVM
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Server consolidation ◦ Fewer pieces of hardware to manage ◦ Reduce energy costs ◦ Take up less space in the server room ◦ Make more efficient use of hardware
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Hardware independence ◦ VMs can be moved between hosts with different hardware, thanks to the hypervisor Entire system (OS, applications, and data) is contained in a set of virtual machine files. ◦ Provides flexibility in managing servers Centralized server management
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If server hardware fails, how easily can you restore operations? How much CPU and RAM is wasted in your traditional servers? How much downtime do you experience if you have to replace or upgrade server hardware? If software changes cause the server to fail, how easily can you recover? How easily can you deploy a new server?
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Capture the state of a server at a point in time You can safely make changes, knowing that you can revert back if something goes wrong Integration with backups ◦ Snapshots themselves are not backups!
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Make a copy of a server without disturbing the live server “Let’s try this” Production -> development
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Have a pre-configured version of an OS ready to deploy Ease of deployment opens up new possibilities
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Move VMs between hosts with no downtime VMs are automatically restarted when a host fails Automatically balance computing capacity across hosts
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Easily add CPU, RAM, HD space, NIC Minimize downtime
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Some vendors provide premade VMs for deploying their services ◦ Cisco NCS Collaborate with other districts ◦ Moodle VM
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Manage failover from production datacenters to disaster recovery sites Periodic VM replication to DR site Automated DR failover Prioritize VMs
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Hardware ◦ Hosts 3x HP ProLiant DL380 G6 8x CPU cores per host, at 2.266 GHz each 24 GB RAM per host ◦ Storage 2x HP StorageWorks P4300 G2 (LeftHand SAN) 5.5 TB usable Software ◦ VMware vSphere 4
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Makes switching to virtual servers much easier Can do it (mostly) live Some success and some failure Sometimes, it’s a good opportunity to rebuild
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(dramatic reenactment)
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10 CPUs, 22 cores Using 13.2 GHz / 97.5 GHz 288 GB RAM Using 151 GB 34 TB usable storage Using 24 TB 10 TB is high performance 44 virtual servers
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You’ll need outside help May need to buy new hardware and software Added complexity, new ways for things to go wrong When not to virtualize
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Supports larger VMs ◦ Up to 1 TB RAM and 32 virtual CPUs Improvements to HA ◦ Easier to set up, more scalable vSphere Web Client
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adaduffy@edina.k12.mn.us 952-848-4993
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