Choosing the right virtualization technology

January 11, 2008, 06:26 PM —  CiRBA — 

Fewer and fewer IT organizations are asking whether they should virtualize
systems. The focus is now on how should they leverage virtualization
in their environment. The maturation of virtualization solutions in the x86
and UNIX realm has opened the door to an endless array of choices. More choices
offer organizations greater flexibility, but they can also introduce confusion
and complexity. Every virtualization technology operates in a slightly different
manner. This is compounded by the fact that every IT environment is vastly different,
with its own unique operating patterns, technical compositions, and business
constraints. Because of this, there's probably never going to be one ideal virtualization
technology for every IT scenario. Thus, it's better to focus resources on choosing
the right technology for a specific situation.

Following are six factors to consider when evaluating virtualization software.

1. Mobility and Motioning

Motioning enables applications to move between physical servers without disruption.
Available on VMware's VMotion,
XenMotion, and IBM P6 LPARs,
motioning has the potential to transform capacity management. However, it's
not without its problems. Motioning can introduce volatility and create vexing
challenges for management groups tasked with incident management and compliance
issues. To gauge whether motioning is a good option in the environment, organizations
first need to analyze maintenance windows, consistency of workload patterns,
and disaster recovery strategies.

Maintenance windows - When combined on a single physical
platform, maintenance windows become intermingled. This can easy create scenarios
where there is no window of time available for hardware maintenance. The same
problem arises for software freezes. The ability to motion virtual machines
can alleviate this problem by allowing servers to be moved offline for scheduled
maintenance or software updates. Alternatively, without motioning in place,
the proper initial placement of applications on virtual hosts is extremely important.
In either case, making the right placement decisions is critical, since the
mere act of motioning may constitute a change that violates a software freeze.

Consistency of workload patterns - The advantages of motioning
may vary widely depending on the level of volatility in workload patterns. It
can be very useful to leverage space capacity in highly volatile workloads.
However, those benefits diminish in low-volatility scenarios.

Organizations can analyze the ideal placements based on the variations in utilization
patterns for a day or a week or both. If patterns do not vary widely from day
to day, a static placement may be sufficient and the volatility of motioning
avoided. If the patterns are significantly different from day to day, a more
dynamic solution is warranted.

Disaster recovery strategy - If application-level replication
or hot spares are part of the

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