6. Virtualization -- Mainstream in Enterprises Today Enterprises that do not leverage virtualization technologies will spend 25 percent more annually for hardware, software, labor and space for Intel servers More than 50 percent of all virtual servers are running production-level applications , including the most business critical workloads Virtualization adoption in the SMB space is expected to double in the next 2 years. Server virtualization technology has entered mainstream data centers…
24. More evidence More Evidence Got any more examples? Did mid-sized firms also see these savings?
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28. Next steps Rad. Now who can help give our project a quick start?
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32. Thank you! Pdf Copy of presentation? ROI/TCO Analysis Survey? Email: [email_address] or [email_address] Questions?
Hinweis der Redaktion
In the traditional IT stack there was a rigid 1-1 mapping between hardware, an instance of an operating system and a single software application. That rigid model lead to tremendous under-utilization of hardware resources. The industry statistic is that in this traditional model, servers are utilized only 5-15%. This is a huge problem for companies – having a very large pool of resources that stays idle most of the time. it is a picture that CFOs are very unhappy about. But the story doesn't end there – the server sprawl and the associated underutilization of resources have ripple through effects for the entire environment – server sprawl means not only wasted investment in hardware, but also unsustainable power, cooling, and real estate costs. This tremendous complexity means that it is hard to provision new infrastructure and to respond to changing business needs. IT departments are stuck wasting cycles on mundane tasks, and don’t have time to focus on what really matters. For example, in most companies a single sys admin can support only up to 20 servers, and the time for provisioning a new server is often 6-8 weeks.
Before we highlight what customers have been able to do with virtualization, let’s put some more color around the magnitude of the problem we are solving. Server sprawl – read the stats Power & cooling – read the stats Space crunch – read the stats Operating / labor cost – read the stats.
The consensus is growing within the industry and analyst community that virtualization has moved out of the “early adoption” stage and into the mainstream within businesses today, with VMware solutions leading the way. VMware now counts 100% of the Fortune 100 as customers. Deployment of virtualization solutions in small and medium businesses is expected to double over the next 2 years according to a recent Yankee Group study.
Key Points: There are several options for implementing consolidation/containment; how does consolidation and containment with VMware software compare with other means of consolidation and containment? Physical consolidation: reduces server footprint, often offers additional management capabilities, but still leaves utilization low (but combining physical consolidation with VMware software can be a great solution) Application consolidation: particularly on x86, is highly problematic because of potential application conflicts and because ability to configure OS and hardware for a specific application is lost; also potentially introduces reliability issues because one problematic application could potentially cause downtime for other applications on the same system Consolidation with VMware virtual infrastructure: maximum benefit of the options considered
In 2003, the IT service arm of a leading North American utility started a consolidation project, using VMware software as the primary vehicle for achieving this. The customer had 1000 + servers, The customers virtualize a broad workload that was inclusive of - 111 SQL Servers that 24 physical servers…4 farms - 49 Lotus notes servers that 10 servers. - 50 Citrix physical servers that on to 15 <click> The end resulting that have been migrated to 50, 8-socket capable IBM x440 servers --- Virtualization based consolidation not only affects the servers but consolidated and raises the quality and service levels of everything around it, including storage, network and facilities. Specifically in this project. Consolidation of Storage: silo’d internal disks to Highly Available Tiered Storage, a Hitachi SAN A 10:1 consolidation of network ports, or in the words of the customer from spaghetti wiring to world class datacenter. Dramatic cost s avoidance on the facilities and hardware infrastructure. --- So what’s been the net impact of this virtualization project?
Speaker Notes: The most obvious benefit of server consolidation is the reduction in capital invested in hardware. In this example, the 1000 1 to 4 CPU servers were consolidated onto 80 2 to 8 CPU systems over a 3 year period. Netting out the investment in software and infrastructure, the project saved a total of $5.8M, or $5,816 per workload, or $5.3 Million in total. Whether implemented during a server refresh or to contain future server growth, the reduction in server costs is striking.
Speaker Notes: To summarize, the cost savings from consolidation with VMware Infrastructure is compelling. Done on a moderate scale, the average company can save $8,251 per workload over 3 years. The typical return on investment (ROI) for a virtualization project is 6 months or less. Virtualization projects pay for themselves. Note: These figures are all PER workload. Multiply by number of workloads to measure total savings over 3 years. Examples: For 100 workloads virtualized, a company saves $825,100 For 1000 workloads virtualized, a company saves $8,251,000
Let’s take a look at what is driving this very fast adoption of virtualization – what are the benefits that customers are achieving from this technology? The first one is tremendous increase in hardware utilization. <click in the animation> Being able to run multiple OS and multiple applications in virtual machines on the same server leads to increased hardware utilization. VMware customers report that after deploying virtualization, the average utilization of their server farms increases to 60-80%. This is not a percentage but multiples increase over the “before” situation of 5-15%. The second major advantage of virtualization is fast infrastructure provisioning. Because virtual machines are nothing but software files, they can be copied, pasted and moved around with the ease of file copy. <click in the animation> With virtualization, companies can provision a new virtual machine with a mouse click. This is a sea of change from the traditional model where it typically takes days if not weeks or months to provision a new servers. Moreover, virtual machines can be saved as ready templates that can be instantiated as needed. With this instant provisioning capability IT can be responsive to the business like never before. And finally, virtualization enables live stateful migration of virtual machines from one physical box to another without any end user interruption. VMware unveiled the ground-breaking VMotion capability three years ago, and today about 50% of our customers are using it to decrease the planned and unplanned downtime. If you need to do maintenance on a server, you no longer have to bring it down, you can simply VMotion the virtual machines to another server, completely transparently to the user. IT departments can do away with the “maintenance windows”. This capability also opens new horizons for high availability, business continuity and disaster recovery. The ROI customers are getting from virtualization is compelling and immediate! VMware customers report that virtualization investment pays for itself typically within 6 to 9 months. The biggest driver behind virtualization adoption is this indisputable, very tangible Return on Investment.
Now let’s take a very specific look comparing the provisioning activity in the virtual versus physical world. In the physical world, you have to procure and configure the hardware. This is an activity that can takes weeks if you need to order a new system. Then you go through the process of configuring the OS, networking, and applications. All together, this could be 20-40 hours of actual work, plus 4-6 weeks of time from start to finish. By contrast, deploying a VM from a template takes minutes. Including configuration, you’re typically talking about <1 hour of actual work. Integrating into the typical IT procurement and approval process, and most likely you’re still only talking about 1 or 2 days.
And finally, comes automation. Using DRS and HA, your infrastructure automatically and dynamically assigns resources to applications only when needed. This is a significant transformation in IT management and significantly improve IT staff performance by 30-50% And finally the crown jewel in this line up: Automation The infrastructure can then automatically manage the dynamic distribution of resources, assigning compute power to applications only when needed and to the extent needed (or specified by policies). This is impressive stuff. You all know how excited customers get when you pitch VMotion. Result: Less time and thus less people focused on simple day-to-day management tasks
[Present customer scenario as outlined on the chart. Focus on challenge and results.]
[Present customer scenario as outlined on the chart. Focus on challenge and results.]