oops, I post it to Michael & not to the list

Shahar

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Shahar Dag 
To: Michael Lewinger 
Sent: Monday, January 18, 2010 8:51 AM
Subject: Re: better platform for virtualization


Hello Michael

I once took a course about Windows 2008 servers (but I am not an expert, I 
didn't even install it).

I will try to point some subjects:
MS has hyper-V which is their virtual platform.
They have a tool that convert a physical server to virtual server (I think it 
is called VSMT).
I think they have a tool for load balance in a virtual cluster NLB, and a tool 
for cluster fail over.
MS also have a server version without GUI, to reduce resources requirement and 
enhance security.
They admit that VMware is better, but they claim that they provide a complete 
working solution.

If I had to build the system I would:
1. Measure the load of all the servers (this will give a clue how many physical 
servers I really need).
2. Put all the data on external file system (this is a must if you want to move 
a virtual server from one physical machine to another).
3. Create a virtual cluster with fail over. The resources of the cluster should 
be enough that in the case of failure in one physical server, the rest of the 
cluster will hold all the virtual machines.

Sorry that I can't come with real suggestions.

Shahar
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Michael Lewinger 
  To: Israeli Linux mailing list 
  Cc: Arie Blum ; Oleg Kovalev 
  Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 5:49 PM
  Subject: better platform for virtualization


  Hi there,

  I'd like to ask your oppinion on the virtualization of several WINDOWS 
servers installed on a client's medium business server room. There are about 6 
crucial servers (priority, exchange, file server, and some others) that need to 
be accessible when they fail. Currently, each server has its own RAID storage. 
There is only 300GB of data to be kept on those servers (mostly exchange and 
file server). The virtualized servers should become alive when one of those 
main servers dies, and theoretically, no more than 2 VMs should be running in 
parallel.

  What would be the best virtualization platform for such a requirement ? 
Windows 2008 server, or XEN ? 
  Would a fast single Xeon processor be able to handle this requirements ? 8GB 
or 4GB ?
  Would you consider VMWARE on top of CENTOS ?
  Would you suggest that the data should already be kept on a NAS appliance as 
of now, even before DRP takes place ?
  (If yes), which NAS solution would you use ?
  Would you consider a cloud-based backup program such as Crashplan to backup 
this data ? Is there any other enterprise-level backup app that can store 
backups on cloud storage ?

  I appreciate all your answers !

  Michael 
  --------------------------------------------------------
  Michael Lewinger   -   MBR Computers
            http://mbrcomp.co.il
         supp...@mbrcomp.co.il
                  054-2284055







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