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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy First HalfSecond Half (01) Introduction to Microsoft Virtualization(05) Hyper-V Management (02) Hyper-V Infrastructure (06) Hyper-V High Availability and Live Migration (03) Hyper-V Networking (07) Integration with System Center 2012 Virtual Machine Manager (04) Hyper-V Storage (08) Integration with Other System Center 2012 Components ** MEAL BREAK **
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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During one period of activity shortly after the launch, the site—which was running on 10 servers—experienced a large spike in visitor traffic. It took site managers less than 10 minutes to make an additional 20 servers available using the cloud, which was more than enough to handle the sudden increase in activity.
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“The tools with Azure are really brilliant, and they’re getting better every month. It’s clearly a platform that’s being invested in by Microsoft and by many, many others who see its potential.-Julian Thomas, CTO at Pottermore
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Global Scale: Powered by Hyper-V Technet.microsoft.com − Over 1 million hits per day MSDN.microsoft.com − Over 3 million hits per day More Properties − Connect.microsoft.com − Social.microsoft.com − Codeplex
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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PRIVATE CLOUD AT MMS
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Microsoft Management Summit 2010
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MMS 2010: Management 40,000 Hyper-V Virtual Machines for ~80 different labs in 5 days on just 41 physical servers 40,000 Hyper-V Virtual Machines for ~80 different labs in 5 days on just 41 physical servers
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17 MMS 2011: More VMs, Fewer Servers MMS 2010: 3 racks/41 servers 328 logical processors (2S/4C) 5.125 TB Memory 82 network cables MMS 2011: 2 racks/32 servers 768 logical processors (2S/12T) 4 TB Memory –Dynamic Memory saved >1 TB RAM –Over $80,000 savings 12 network cables –8 Ethernet/4 Fiber Channel
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MMS 2010MMS 2011Delta Racks32-33% Servers4132-21% Server Form Factor/Memory Rack 128 GB RAM per server Blade 128 GB RAM per blade CPUs (2/server) Intel Xeon E5504 (4M Cache, 2.00 GHz, 4.80 GT/s Intel® QPI) Intel Xeon X5670 (12M Cache, 2.93 GHz, 6.40 GT/s Intel® QPI) Cores per server8 12 (+ Symmetric Multi- Threading) +50% Total CPU Threads328768+134% Total RAM5.125 TB4 TB-22% Network Cables82 8 Ethernet + 4 Fiber Channel -85% Power~ 9,020 Watts~ 8,420 Watts~ 7% Dynamic Memory reduces the physical memory footprint by over 1 Terabyte while delivering more virtual machines That’s a saving of ~$80,000! Dynamic Memory reduces the physical memory footprint by over 1 Terabyte while delivering more virtual machines That’s a saving of ~$80,000! MMS 2011
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Maxing Out… 7,200 VMs running across 32 blade servers 225 VMs running per Hyper-V host where each host has 128 GB of physical memory. Here’s an example of where Hyper-V Dynamic Memory improved density by over 100%. http://blogs.technet.com/b/virtualization/archive/2011/03/29/mms-2011-labs-powered-by-hyper-v-system-center-amp-hp.aspx
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy Cloud | Obstacles
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy Cross-Platform From the Metal Up All About the App Foundation for the Future Cloud on your Terms
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HARDWARE PARTNERS & Private Cloud Fast Track OPERATING SYSTEMS 3 RD PARTY MANAGEMENT APPLICATION FRAMEWORKS MULTI-HYPERVISOR MANAGEMENT XenServer vSphere
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Compute Storage (File/Block) Network Service Delivery & Automation Application Management Infrastructure Management Windows Server 2012 Virtualization Networking StorageManagement Remote Desktop Services Web Applications Availability Scalability Security Hardware
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Profile Virtualization Desktop Virtualization (VDI) Server Virtualization (Hyper-V) Client Virtualization Application Virtualization (App-V) Azure Virtual Machines
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Microsoft has a broad approach to virtualization from the desktop to the data center to the cloud There are a variety of virtualization offerings from Microsoft Microsoft’s integration throughout the stack provides unbeatable interoperability
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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Microsoft Virtual Academy
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©2013 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Office, Azure, System Center, Dynamics and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
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Cloud to data center to desktop Full range of products & solutions Large partner eco-system Complete management Physical and virtual & cross-hypervisor In-guest w/ application & services It’s the platform you know Familiar tools Key feature of platform Best TCO/ROI Lower costs up front Easier integration w/ existing systems Lower ongoing costs
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Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature –FeatureName Microsoft-Hyper-V -All Dir *.xml | import-vm | start-vm
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Windows Server Instances Install Base (Physical + Virtual) Source: Microsoft, Spring 2012 Off-premises instances will grow 90% between now & 2015 Hosting growth is 3X that of on-premises 3 Million HOSTED The Opportunity 19 Million
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Contoso BankWoodgrove Bank Multiple customers on shared infrastructure HRR&D Multiple departments on shared infrastructure Build & Host Private Clouds Dedicated hardware per customer… with “cloud” benefits Host Your Own Public Cloud Shared infrastructure as a service
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