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ARN's A-Z guide to networking 19 December, 2007 14:50:54
As business needs change, so do the requirements for the business backbone. ARN looks at networking trends and technologies and reports on predictions for 2008 and beyond. - +
Networking's greatest debates in the Data Center 29 October, 2007 07:34:19
All time classic debates include Mac Vs PC, Tape storage vs. disk storage and AMD vs. IntelA look at the greatest all time Data Center controversies in the history of the networking industry. - +
Business continuity 09 November, 2007 17:09:55
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Zenoss: New dog masters old monitoring tricks 30 November, 2007 12:50:00
Zenoss Core 2.1 impresses with object-based approach, strong device discovery, native Windows monitoring, and open source extensibilitySince the dawn of the business network, there has been a need to ensure that the network services provided to the enterprise are alive and responsive. Traditionally, in midsized businesses, this role has been filled by complex, closed source, and fantastically expensive solutions from manufacturers such as BMC, CA, HP, and IBM. And while these extravagant expenses make no customer happy, many users of these packages also complain of their complexity. Enough administrators have spent enough time wrangling with their monitoring systems to make a lot of smart people imagine that there must be a better way.
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The convergence of server and storage management is slowly taking place as enterprises look for more automated ways of managing their data center assets. Spurring the trend toward convergence -- which remains somewhat hampered by a lack of available tools -- is virtualization technology.
"If you don't believe servers and storage have converged, all you need to do is take a look at server and storage virtualization," says Greg Schulz, senior analyst for Storage IO. "Let's go way back -- originally servers and storage were managed together, then they were separated, and now they are being put back together again."
Virtualization technology lets administrators divide physical servers or storage devices into logical virtual machines that can support different operating systems and applications.
Businesses are looking to virtualization so they can consolidate server and storage resources; run multiple workloads on a single machine more efficiently; and dynamically provision resources as application and business needs shift.
Server virtualization software from companies such as VMware, SWsoft, Virtual Iron and XenSource has been adopted by leagues of users; according to IDC, more than three-quarters of companies with 500 or more employees use virtual servers, and 45 percent of all new servers purchased in 2006 were virtualized.
However storage virtualization deployments are less mainstream. IDC reports 49 percent of companies are evaluating storage virtualization, while 34 percent have implemented virtualization software or hardware. Enterprises are having difficulty adopting storage virtualization products to pool resources from multiple heterogeneous arrays because the software to do it is lacking.
Where the gaps are
When businesses deploy software for creating and managing virtual servers, the virtual machines typically get storage capacity from shared storage networks. Most link to Fibre Channel and IP storage-area networks (SAN) or network-attached storage devices -- not direct server-attached storage. According to host bus adapter vendor Emulex, at least 70 percent of VMware ESX Server users get their storage from SANs.
Managing and provisioning compute power for these virtual and dynamic environments is often a manual process. Software such as VMware's VMotion and VirtualCenter Distributed Resource Scheduler can move running virtual machines among physical servers, but it falls short of adequately managing storage resources for capacity-hungry virtualized applications.
"VirtualCenter's Distributed Resource Scheduler takes care of monitoring utilization and reallocating [compute] resources as needed to provide an as-fast-as-possible use scenario," says Eric Kuzmack, IT architect at Gannett, which has dozens of servers partitioned into hundreds of virtual machines with VMware ESX Server.
To move storage resources from one virtual machine to another, Kuzmack uses VMotion and Distributed Resource Scheduler. But allocating additional storage capacity requires manual intervention by Kuzmack, who has to use multiple tools: one for monitoring storage capacity, another for monitoring and reporting on the links between application performance and storage resources, and a third for provisioning storage.
"Right now the VMware VirtualCenter tools don't have insight into the allocation of free space in storage," Kuzmack says. "We monitor that disk space with operating system tools. Provisioning storage is done manually when we create a new virtual server farm. As long as I have enough storage provisioned for the server farm, I don't have to do anything on the storage system."
The matter of aligning compute and storage resources is complicated further by the number of IT staff it takes to make changes to the storage and server infrastructure.
For example, adding compute and storage resources to a business-critical database involves coordination of several people: a database administrator who makes the request for more capacity and compute power; operations staff who install the additional servers; a storage administrator who approves the allocation and provisions the storage; and a server administrator who provisions the server with the correct configuration.
"When you want to provision a set of resources for an application, you need to not just provision storage, you need to provision servers, networking [connections] and do all that in conjunction with each other," says Patrick Eitenbickler, director of marketing for HP StorageWorks. "All these [forms of management] need to work in concert with each other. HP is going to build those linkages and bridges between server, storage, virtualization and automation software to avoid that."
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