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VMware: The Virtualization Drag

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Channel: Virtualization

   

In our tests of Vmware's Infrastructure 3 Suite, the performance overhead of VMware ESX Server, while typically less than 10 percent, spiked as high as 20 percent. We're not saying running VMware will hobble your systems--hardware virtualization simplifies server consolidation, saving money and data-center real estate while cutting power usage, and double-digit performance hits can be avoided with proper planning. But there is an undeniable cost in terms of performance.

In tests at our Boston partner labs, we found the primary benefit of running ESX Server is, not surprisingly, making the most of hardware resources by letting existing servers run more apps. In fact, virtualization may be server vendors' worst nightmare: Gartner sees a slim possibility that the technology could reduce the compound annual growth rate for x86 servers to--get this--negative 0.6 percent by 2010. We expect savings in data center power as well.

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Oddly enough, then, when we recently asked readers which tech buzzword they most despise, virtualization came in a strong second, just behind SOA. One in four respondents threatened bodily harm to the next salesperson who mentioned it, and 20 percent said they didn't realize expected benefits.

Still, virtualization is here to stay, and that's a good thing despite its apparent image problem. Whether you use Microsoft Virtual Server, VMware, Xen or another package, virtualization delivers a raft of benefits, from better use of physical assets to improved management of applications to the ability to divvy up resources across machines in a way that the sum of a virtual assigned resource--such as memory--exceeds actual physical memory. Using virtual machines may reduce physical server count by moving older applications off older hardware to newer systems that are less likely to experience hardware failure or, in the event of failure, have better parts availability. We found ways to boost the payoff from virtualization technologies, and our testing highlights which areas will suffer least from performance drags.

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NWC REPORTS
bullet Chip Changes Propel Virtualization
New x86 processors from Intel and AMD are paving the way for data center virtualization. But is a world of virtual systems that take care of themselves really possible in our lifetime?

Mixed Bag

Virtual machines let hardware run multiple OS instances without compromising application availability and stability. In contrast, running multiple applications under a single instance of an OS can at the very least reduce availability, just through maintenance demands. At worst, multiple apps running on the same OS can cause instability, resulting in unexpected downtime.

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