Software helps users consolidate servers
By
Deni Connor
,
Network World
, 01/06/2003
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Large businesses are beginning to use software that lets them consolidate applications and operating systems onto as few Intel-based servers as possible, easing administration and lowering costs.
Known as server virtualization, the technology promises to let customers divide the server and create independent environments
that can run different applications and operating systems on the partitions or processors of the Intel server. Companies,
such as Connectix, SW-Soft and VMware are providing the software that lets Intel servers emulate the software partitioning
and virtual machine capabilities of bigger Unix servers from Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Sun, and mainframes from IBM.
There are two types of server virtualization techniques in Intel machines - virtual machine and virtual server. In a virtual
machine environment, multiple operating systems run side by side on the individual processors or partitions of the server.
In virtual server environments, one operating system is virtualized across the partitions and processors, where it can run
multiple applications. With virtualization software, a customer could run an e-mail application on the Windows partition while
running a Web server under Linux, or run several lightweight applications such as calendaring or mail on a Linux virtual server
environment. Without server virtualization software, it would be necessary to add servers as the number of applications grew.
The desire to consolidate servers is growing, too. IDC predicts that 75% of large corporations will consolidate portions of
their servers or storage this year. The research firm says the Windows NT/2000 market will see more than $1.3 billion spent
on consolidation; Linux consolidation will top $232 million. By 2006, consolidation in the Windows NT/2000 market will more
than double to $2.7 billion.
"We are trying to reduce the number of overall servers we use," says Randy Robinson, vice president of IT for Unum Provident,
the world's largest disability insurance provider, in Chattanooga, Tenn. The company's server farm has grown by 50% over the
past two years.
"If we have a team that wants to develop an application, typically we will need new servers for development, testing and training,"
he says. "With virtualization, we can take a two- or four-processor server and create multiple instances of the operating
system, which allows us to segment and partition our development, training and testing activities, without having a negative
impact on someone else."
Meanwhile, Chris Schuttger, infrastructure architect for TXU, an energy services "company in Dallas, is using virtualization
software from VMware to better exploit the resources of the bigger IBM servers he is buying.
"As the industry makes faster and faster processors, a customer can buy a single processor machine with a lot of headroom
they won't ordinarily use," Shuttger says. "If I can buy a four-processor system that can be partitioned with software like
VMware, I get two things - higher processor capacity and the ability to run multiple applications on one piece of hardware."
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