Archive for category Virtual Iron
My VMworld 2009 Sessions
Posted by Chris in Citrix, ESX, Hyper-V, Hypervisors, Microsoft, Oracle, Red Hat, Server Virtualization, VMware, Virtual Iron, Xen on June 15th, 2009
I’ll have four sessions at the upcoming VMworld Conference. If you’re interested, here are the details…
BC2541 – Re-architecting Backup and Recovery for Virtual Environments: Best Practices
Server virtualization is one of the fundamental building blocks of the dynamic data center and with it brings new management challenges, especially in the area of data protection and recovery. Existing data protection architectures may provide a short term serviceable solution, but lack the scalability to be a mainstay in tomorrow’s data center. Continued data growth is also compounding data protection complexity, as enterprises must accommodate data growth by increasing backup system performance in order to stay within backup windows for data protection. We are at a time where organizations should reevaluate existing data protection practices and leverage new technologies to improve data recovery and lessen or eliminate the performance tax posed by many existing data protection architectures. This session breaks down modern VM data protection solutions, including VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB), array-level snapshots, and third party enterprise backup software solutions. Attendees will be exposed to common data protection pitfalls as well as successful blueprints for modern VMware data protection architectures. Chris Wolf has been architecting data protection solutions for enterprise virtualization environments since 2002 and includes an abundance of lessons learned and best practices drawn from real world implementations in this session.
DV2439 – Breaking Down Desktop Virtualization Alternatives
Numerous methods exist for delivering applications to endpoint devices today: virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), application streaming, presentation virtualization, and hybrid approaches. The session breaks down the use cases that drive client virtualization choices and highlights future developments such as desktop hypervisors that will likely impact long term client virtualization architectures.
EA2442 – Software Licensing in the Virtual Enterprise: Current Problems and Future Trends
Virtual environments present new challenges for software license management across an enterprise. In this session, Burton Group senior analyst Chris Wolf breaks down the current state of software licensing and support for both server and desktop virtualization environments, while highlighting the technical elements of the virtual infrastructure that impact product licensing. He will also describe the licensing and support model best suited for modern virtualization platforms, with examples of vendors that provide best-in-class virtualization licensing policies today. All major enterprise application and OS vendors will be covered, including Microsoft, Sun, Red Hat, Novell, Oracle, HP, IBM, CA, SAP, Symantec, and Citrix. The session concludes with guidance on how to leverage RFPs to obtain licensing and software support clarity.
TA2400: Hypervisor Competitive Differences: What the Vendors Aren’t Telling You
In this session, Chris Wolf and Richard Jones dissect the competitive differences that exist with today’s leading hypervisors, with a special focus on the under-the-hood features that don’t make it onto vendor data sheets. Attendees of this session will see firsthand the differences that exist with all major virtualization hypervisor vendors (e.g. VMware, Microsoft, Citrix, and Oracle) and will leave with a list of pointed questions to ask prospective hypervisor vendors regarding their current solutions and future plans. Vendor scorecards will also be presented, allowing attendees to see how each major hypervisor ranks against Burton Group’s enterprise production-class hypervisor evaluation criteria. Areas where hypervisors fall short of production readiness will be clearly highlighted as well.
VMworld Europe Sessions Now Available Online
Posted by Chris in Citrix, Citrix Project Independence, Desktop Virtualization, ESX, Hosted Client Hypervisors, Hyper-V, Microsoft, Neocleus, Process VM (RingCube), Server Virtualization, VMware, VMware CVP, VMware Player, VMware Workstation, Virtual Computer, Virtual Iron, Virtual PC, VirtualBox, Virtualization Management, Webcast, Xen on March 9th, 2009
If you missed VMworld Europe, you now can see all of the conference sessions online, assuming you have a VMworld.com subscription. If not, you may want to consider gettting a subscription, which at $699 is a pretty good bargain, considering the amount of content you get. Anyway, if you’re interested in seeing any of my VMworld Europe sessions, here are the links:
Hypervisor Competitive Differences – The Aftermath
Posted by Chris in Citrix, Hyper-V, Microsoft, Server Virtualization, VMware, Virtual Iron, Xen on March 3rd, 2009
Following last Wednesday’s announcement and VMworld Europe presentation regarding enterprise production-class hypervisor evaluation criteria, I have received an enormous amount of feedback from both users and vendors. My inbox was flooded with highly positive feedback from more than 150 users (e.g., architects, directors, integrators, and administrators). Vendor feedback, on the other hand, was mixed.
Between the time of the presentation and today, I’ve had the opportunity to speak directly with three of the vendors covered in the presentation, and had an email dialogue with the fourth vendor. Most vendors thought the presentation was fair and balanced, but not all were thrilled with the media coverage. For example, here are two articles in which the announcement was covered:
In the “VMware outshines Hyper-V” article, I was quoted as saying Microsoft would not be happy with the presentation. For background, when I was interviewed by Bridget (the reporter who wrote the article), I had given examples of how each of the four vendors covered in the presentation would not like the results. I mention this because I don’t want it to appear that I was singling out Microsoft. All vendors were treated equally in the presentation, and I didn’t hold punches with any of them. Several folks on the Microsoft virtualization team were present during my presentation, and they were not upset at all. The Microsoft team understood our position and appreciated the fact that I mentioned in the presentation that Hyper-V on Windows Server 2008 R2 will be close to meeting our enterprise production hypervisor feature requirements. Once the product ships, we will conduct a full evaluation against our criteria and go from there.
Citrix XenServer 5.0 and Virtual Iron 4.5 also had respectable showings in the presentation. Sure no vendor wants to hear their shortcomings aired in a public forum, but both vendors, like Microsoft, agreed with our points. That being said, we will stick by our position – only hypervisors that meet our entire list of required features are enterprise production ready. That leaves only VMware VI 3.5 as a product we will recommend for enterprise production roles. As other hypervisors satisfy our feature requirements (one in particular is very close), we will recommend them as well.
Both Microsoft and VMware have come forward and made statements in favor of the evaluation criteria.
“Burton Group is the first technology analyst firm to arm customers with an in-depth list of criteria for evaluating virtualization software. This analysis shows the depth and breadth of Burton Group research expertise, and their ability to deliver substantial value to customers.” – Bogomil Balkansky, VP of Product Marketing, VMware
“As was the case with my colleagues, we thought Burton’s report was a fair representation of the primary commercial hypervisors available to customers. And as we discussed last week, we aim to prove that our collaboration with Citrix, Novell and Red Hat, as well as new features in WS08 R2 and SCVMM r2, will improve Microsoft’s position in Burton’s report.” -Patrick O’Rourke, Group Product Manager – Windows Infrastructure, Microsoft (this quote was taken from this post’s comments)
Of course, user validation is most important, but it’s also important for vendors to accept our criteria and to strive to meet or exceed it. In my opinion, receiving positive backing from the top two vendors in the x86 virtualization space further validates our research and resultant evaluation criteria.
I’m not going to revisit the points in the presentation (you can view a 15 minute summary presentation here), but I cannot emphasize enough the importance of the long term commitment associated with server virtualization platform decisions. Exit costs associated with migrating hypervisors can be significant and must be weighed. Migrating from one virtual hard disk format to another may require the time and nearly the same manpower that it took for the physical to virtual conversions that drove an organization’s initial server virtualization deployment. Also, you’re not just getting a hypervisor, you’re getting an ecosystem, and that is why our evaluation criteria focus heavily on factors such as storage, network, security, and management integration. Hypervisors must provide the performance and stability expected by the organization, but also integrate well within the rest of the IT infrastructure.
Many of our clients considering going with multiple hypervisors see a natural divide between server virtualization and desktop virtualization. You maintain separate VM OS images and rely on different management tools in the desktop space anyway, so using a different hypervisor for the desktop environment is a possibility. In most cases, servers and desktops are managed by different divisions in the IT department. The separation is natural in these cases, and the familiarity with associated management tools is just as important. In addition, the refresh cycles, patch cycles, and other updates are typically different between server and desktop. That being said, vendors looking to penetrate established VMware clients need to do a better job talking about how they are better platforms for virtual desktops. One way to do that is by letting their features do the talking; adding memory overcommit support would be a good first step.
At Burton Group, we will be spending considerable time on competitive differentiation in 2009. The VMworld presentation and announcement was really just the start. If you have thoughts on our evaluation criteria, I would love to hear them.
Note: Originally posted to Burton Group’s Data Center Strategies blog.
March 5, 2009 update: Added VMware and Microsoft quotes.
Apples, Oranges, and Hypervisor Price Comparisons
Posted by Chris in Citrix, Hyper-V, Microsoft, Server Virtualization, VMware, Virtual Iron, Virtualization Management, Xen on August 7th, 2008
Fruit: Apples, Oranges
Fruitful: Current discussions on hypervisor price differences
Fruitless: Getting hypervisor vendors to agree on a fair pricing comparison
The Task
There’s been some interesting hypervisor pricing comparisons circulating the Internet over the past two weeks that have caught my interest:
- VMware’s Mike Dipetrillo: ESX 3.5i for Free and the Impact on Hyper-V and the SMB
- Virtualization.info – Alessandro Perilli: VMware ESXi vs Microsoft Hyper-V: which one is better for SMBs?
- EvolveTechnologies – Dave Sobel: Is VMware Cheaper than Microsoft?
After reading with interest, I set out to conduct my own pricing evaluation, thinking that it couldn’t be too hard to get vendors to agree on a fair pricing comparison (insert joke here). To keep it simple, I decided to use a small branch office consisting of six Windows Server 2003 servers in the evaluation. I consider high availability a requirement in all production virtualization deployments and added virtual infrastructure management to the mix as well. To summarize, the solution requirements consisted of:
- Virtualizing six Windows Server 2003 servers on two 2-way physical hosts
- High availability failover support
- Centralized management of the virtual infrastructure
With the criteria set, I moved to evaluating vendor solutions with each vendor’s bottom line list price.
The Proposed Solutions
Table 1 below compares what I see as comparable solutions from VMware, Microsoft, Virtual Iron, and Citrix.
| Vendor | Hypervisor Package | High Availability | Management | Total Price |
| Citrix (Stratus OEM) | XenServer 4.1 (included in Stratus Avance) | Stratus Avance (includes XenServer hypervisor) $2,495 per node x 2 nodes = $4,990 | Included with Stratus Avance software | $4,990 |
| Microsoft | Hyper-V (included with Windows Server 2008 Enterprise license) $3,999 per node x 2 nodes = $7,998 | Included with the Windows Server 2008 Enterprise Edition license | Essential management is provided by the Hyper-V Manager MMC (included with the OS). Advanced management included in System Center Virtual Machine Manger 2008. VMM 2007 Workgroup edition is priced at $499. | $7,998 or $8,497 (assumed price once VMM 2008 is available) |
| Virtual Iron | Virtual Iron Extended Enterprise Edition – $799 per socket x 4 sockets – $3,196 | Included in Virtual Iron Extended Enterprise Edition | Included in Virtual Iron Extended Enterprise Edition | $3,196 |
| VMware | VI Standard High Availability Acceleration Kit for 4 processors $7,254 | Included in VMware Standard High Availability Acceleration Kit | Virtual Center Foundation Server license included in acceleration kit | $7,524 |
Table 1: Hypervisor price comparison (assumes Windows guest OS licensing is not required)
Citrix XenServer 4.1 does not include high availability, so the Status Avance OEM was used instead. Note that the pricing in Table 1 assumes that the branch office already has existing Windows Server 2003 licenses. If licensing is required, or if plans to upgrade branch office systems to Windows Server 2008 are in place, then the pricing comparison changes substantially. The Microsoft solution already includes licensing for 8 VMs, since Hyper-V is a part of the Windows Server 2008 OS. For the three other solutions, the cheapest way to go would be to purchase six Windows Server 2008 standard edition licenses for $995 each (total cost = $5,970 for six VMs). Downgrade rights would allow you to run Windows Server 2003 under the Windows Server 2008 license, and you would already be covered when it comes time to upgrade. Note that there’s no price difference with Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition licenses.
Table 2 shows vendor solution pricing with the Windows Server 2008 license included (added cost of $5,970).
| Vendor | Total Price |
| Citrix (Stratus OEM) | $4,990 + $5,970 = $10,960 |
| Microsoft | $7,998 or $8,497 (with VMM 2008 once it’s available) |
| Virtual Iron | $3,196 + $5,970 = $9,166 |
| VMware | $7,524 + $5,970 = $13,494 |
Table 2: Hypervisor price comparison (assumes Windows guest OS licensing is required)
As you can see, OS licensing cost is a significant factor. With the cost of OS licensing, the Microsoft Hyper-V solution changes from the most expensive to the least expensive. Also, it should be noted that both Table 1 and Table 2 reflect vendor list pricing. Since vendor discounts vary, the resulting paid price for any of the above solutions could be thousands less. Still, the list pricing comparison should give you a good idea of where each vendor stands.
The Fruit of My Labor
I had to use a minimal configuration in order to make the vendor comparisons as close as possible. VMware eloquently stated that for an apples-to-apples comparison with Hyper-V, I should include Systems Center Operations Manger and System Center Configuration Manager in the Microsoft price. However, while Virtual Center does a few things that Virtual Machine Manager doesn’t do, System Center Configuration Manger and Operations Manager can do much more than Virtual Center. So to balance the comparison, I would have to add System Center Configuration Manger and Operations Manager to the price of each solution, making the addition a wash. The same happened when backup was added to the equation. Citrix and Stratus would also argue that their solution includes local storage mirroring support, so purchasing shared network storage is not required and could represent considerable savings. VMware also noted that their price includes a year of Gold Support, and that similar support on competitive offerings could raise the price as much as 20%. Since I cannot buy a VMware product without support, I’m keeping the support cost in my comparison because it does represent the minimum price. In addition, Virtual Iron’s competitors have been quick to note that Virtual Iron does not have a similar supporting vendor ecosystem, which is a decision making factor you won’t find on a product data sheet.
So I’m sure vendors will still argue along the lines of apples-to-apples, but I counter that I am comparing apples-to-apples while agreeing that some may be tastier than others. You may see some of the solutions as granny smith apples and others as red delicious apples. On the outside, they’re all apples, but on the inside the experience is unique to each one.
Fruitless? Fruitful? I welcome your feedback.
Note: Originally posted to Burton Group’s Data Center Strategies blog.







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