vSphere: New Features and Benefits
Bill Ferguson, Global Knowledge
Instructor, VCI, VCP, CCSI, MCT
Abstract
Virtualization of servers is one of the hottest topics in
today's IT environment. VMware has made major improvements to the
VI3 suite of products and released a new and exciting offering
called vSphere. There are over 150 new features, and they are
"across the board," ranging from the overall product and its
packaging to the management interfaces used to configure it. This
white paper takes a look at three main topics: what's new in
configuration maximums, installation, host profiles, and hot plug
capability, and the concept of cloud computing; second, the new
features of the vCenter Server 4.0 and how they simplify management
and reduce the complexity of working with large virtual
environments; and three, the new business aspects of vSphere and
the features included in each of the four editions of the
product.
What's New in vSphere 4.0
It might be more appropriate to ask "what's not new" in vSphere
4.0! A completely new approach and a new list of acronyms are
provided by cloud computing. New, and unbelievable, configuration
maximums have been achieved. The installation of the host server
has been simplified and can now be profiled. The capability on
virtual machines to hot-add components that were once thought
impossible has been achieved.
Cloud Computing
VMware has taken a completely new approach to virtualization by
embracing the cloud computing concept and developing vSphere as an
internal-private cloud (the datacenter) that can co-exist with
external clouds provided by third-parties (such as Amazon,
Nirvanix, and many others). Cloud computing serves businesses that
need production-level performance and reliability, regardless of
whether the resource is on or off their premises. A huge ecosystem
of technology and cloud service providers has emerged over the last
few years and continues to expand.
vSphere promises to offer choice of provider, reliable
technologies, and full application support for this new cloud
computing environment. Users can leverage the Virtual Appliance
Marketplace to deploy over 1000 applications to a cloud or to an
on-premise environment. Also new to vSphere and cloud computing is
the concept of a vApp, which is a logical "wrapper" that contains
an application as well as all of the virtual machines and resources
required to make it function, whether internal or external. Often,
applications require more than one virtual machine to function
properly (for example, a NAT client requires a NAT router), so the
concept of the vApp adds a capability to manage an application at a
new level while at the same time reducing the complexity
involved.
New Configuration Maximums
I can't count the number of times that my VI3 students have said
that they are beginning to consolidate servers but that some of the
very high-powered servers have not even been considered because of
the processor and memory limitations of VMs on VI3. It's
interesting to me that the configuration maximums of 4 processors
and 64GB of RAM per VM could be considered as a "limitation" but,
in some cases, the physical servers that are being used for
databases or other high-capacity jobs require more resources than
those maximums allow. With vSphere, VMware has all but obliterated
that particular objection to consolidating a physical server to a
virtual one. Below are some of the new, and somewhat insane,
configuration maximums for vSphere 4.0 VMs and ESX 4.0 hosts.
- 8 vCPUs per VM
- 255GB RAM per VM (Available Memory)
- 10 vNICs per VM
- 512 vCPUs per host
- 320 VMs simultaneously running on a host
- 64 physical CPUs per host
- 20 vCPUs per core
- 1TB physical RAM per host
New Installation Video
If you've ever installed ESX 3.5, then you know that some parts
of that installation tend to be a little "cryptic" at best. The
VMware Install and Configure classes that I teach begin on day one
with a complete install of an ESX 3.5 operating system on a Dell
PowerEdge host. I typically walk my students through the
installation step by step before we begin, and I still end up
walking around the room and confirming with the students that they
are on the "right track" during the installation. The biggest
danger during the installation is that choosing the wrong LUN on
the SAN could result in destroying important data on a drive. This
is what we refer to as an RGE, or resume generating event! In
addition, the incorrect selection of a NIC that is not actually
connected to the management network can result in a new
"troubleshooting opportunity."
To circumvent these issues and infuse you with more confidence
while installing the software, VMware has provided a video
depicting an installation of ESX 4.0 using the GUI installation. If
"a picture is worth a thousand words," then a video must be worth
at least a thousand pictures! The video is included with the ESX
4.0 software, and you can also find it on the web. After watching
the video, you can quickly relate the example installation to your
own environment and make the appropriate choices. We also highly
recommend that you coordinate with your SAN administrator to make
sure that you don't create an RGE.
Related Courses
VMware vSphere: What's New (VMWN)
VMware vSphere: Install, Configure, Manage (VSICM)
VMware vSphere Fast Track Program (VSFT)