FlexBeta team decided to deeply test VPC 2004 performances and features.
Read the results here but pay extreme attention: they used as host operating system Windows XP Service Pack 2 (build 2028), which is a beta code and also an interim beta release (and for this much more unstable than a standard beta build).
This choice could have compromised any value you’ll find on the report.
virtualization.info Editors
VMware GSX vs ESX comparison is possible?
I received today an email asking if I ever found a good paper comparing both products. I was answering, then thought that someone else could have same question so I prefer to post here my opinion about this:
I think a GSX vs ESX performances comparison article would never exist.
They are not only different products laying on different hardware handlers (operating systems as we like to call them).
The most important fact is that they handle system resources in a total different way: GSX follows standard allocation resources rules (in other words acts like a standard application) while ESX reallocates memory and CPU when needed among VMs.
This implies that ESX requires much less base memory to run, and a small footprint custom kernel helps this more and more.
Another important implication is that, IMHO, running a performant GSX server is much more difficult than running a performant ESX server: in GSX there are so much factors linked to OS and applications handling that could negatively impact on VMs performances. Perfectly knowing how to light and speed up your hostOS is THE task before any other optimization you can do on GSX itself. The study of the best hostOS (between Windows and Linux many variants) would merit so many pages.
In ESX everything is in VMware engineers hands. Yes, you can hack some small aspect but the gain doesn’t do the difference. In a sense you have no choice, so there are less probabilities to go wrong.
If you look at GSX vs ESX in a how-many-features sense, then is simple: GSX is unbeatable, and 3.0 edition will demostrate this at the best.
I’m a big fan of GSX and always suggest it to my customers for many reason: first of all I don’t like “appliance phylosophy” where you haven’t full control on underlaying software, then ’cause today, with Windows 2003 hostOS, I can achieve tasks hard to achieve with Linux hostOS or ESX.
But I perfectly realize that ESX performances are superior, and less prone to negative events.
Both GSX and ESX are going to raise level to same features pool, and you will notice better within some weeks. Probably ESX will insist on performances and super enterprise features (multiprocessor support, native SAN support, VMs fail over and load balancing, and so on), while GSX will insist on flexibility in any scenario (I expect a further improvement about this aspect when virtual driver SDK will be released).
An interesting move could be abandon Linux in future ESX versions and rebuild the product on FreeBSD, achieving superior network performances and stability, remaining with Windows and Linux for GSX versions. But I’m not a VMware engineer and maybe they already tried without good results.
Or, simpler, BSD wasn’t the best choice for the business.
Citrix and VMware: Past, Present, and Future
Brian Madden, Citrix and Terminal Services guru, wrote an interesting three-part article about how Citrix Metaframe (pardon: Presentation Server) and VMware enterprise products (GSX and ESX Server) could be used together.
Analyst Reaction to EMC’s VMware Bid Mixed
Yeah, another old news, but it was never posted here before and it seems to me of some strategic value:
When EMC announced its intent to purchase VMware two weeks ago, many technology analysts greeted the news with praise while their Wall Street counterparts balked, citing a lack of synergy between server virtualization and EMC’s core competency, storage.
Count Susquehanna Financial Group among the doubters of EMC’s $635 million bid, which it says is expensive considering VMware’s 2003 sales.
While encouraged by EMC’s earlier purchases of Legato Systems and Documentum to bolster the company’s information lifecycle management (ILM) strategy, Susquehanna views EMC’s interest in VMware as largely impractical.
“VMware provides little synergy with storage, whereas Legato and Documentum are building on EMC’s Information Lifecycle Management strategy,” a Susquehanna report said. “VMware, which makes server provisioning software for Windows and Linux environments, is in a different space altogether.”
Susquehanna analysts Kaushik Roy and Phillip Rowe also voiced concern that VMware’s revenues are from a low price-point software product with limited growth potential.
VMware offers a number of products, but most revenue comes from software licenses of VMotion, ESX server, and GSX server. VMotion helps customers consolidate servers by migrating applications from smaller servers to new, higher-end servers with no downtime for the applications.
“Although this is a valuable tool, we believe these migrations are relatively infrequent (perhaps several times a year),” Roy and Rowe said in their report.
The ESX and GSX server products allow users to partition their Intel servers for the usage of multiple operating systems and applications simultaneously.
“With already about 2 million users and less than $50 million in revenue last year, we can conclude that these products have a low price point,” Roy and Rowe said.
But Mark Stahlman, who covers EMC for American Technology Research, feels VMware could prove very valuable for EMC.
He sees what other analysts from companies such as Sageza Research or Gartner see: a company undergoing a metamorphosis as a leading purveyor of storage hardware to a software provider of so-called on-demand, or utility, computing.
Stahlman dismisses the term utility computing as unclear marketing hype, preferring the phrase “virtual computing” to describe a software-driven strategy that configures and reconfigures computing and storage systems with no downtime.
Stahlman told internetnews.com EMC’s recent purchases are evidence that the company is trying to improve its position in storage at the same time it is building a broader strategy in virtual computing.
The increased interest in virtualization as a viable computing platform technology is paving the way for an expansion into servers and networks, Stahlman said. IBM, and HP already have placement in this arena.
“EMC’s benefit from the deal is likely to be an opportunity to integrate its own R&D with the products of VMware as well as gain access to the new company’s considerable x86 expertise — crucial now that the Intel architecture is the largest volume for EMC and now that the 64-bit versions of x86 are getting ready to expand rapidly,” Stahlman said.
While he wouldn’t make any predictions outright, Stahlman said EMC repeatedly referenced network virtualization in a conference call, which he said could be an area EMC is targeting while it digests VMware.
Among the players in the networking virtualization is Inkra Networks. The Fremont, Calif.-based company integrates multiple services, such as firewall, VPN, intrusion detection, SSL, and load balancing in hardware platforms.
Meanwhile, Gartner analysts believe an application monitoring and management or server provisioning company is on tap for EMC. And Sageza Research Director Charles King recently told internetnews.com he expects EMC to acquire database and directory components.
While no one seems to agree on what EMC may buy next, EMC CEO and President Joe Tucci has said his company wasn’t actively looking to acquire after VMware. Of course, he said the same thing after announcing the Documentum bid in October.
Credits to Internet News.
VMware announced GSX Server 3.0
Finally it’s (almost) here! This new GSX version is absolutely cool and introduces so many features:
-) 3.6GB memory per virtual machine to support larger server applications
-) Teamed network adapter support, SCSI backup devices
-) 10-20% better disk and networking performance
-) Enhanced Management and Portability
-) VirtualCenter-based customization and provisioning of server images/configurations
-) Windows integration for performance monitoring and event logging of virtual machines
-) Automatic virtual machine start-up and shutdown
-) PXE provisioning for booting and installing operating systems into new virtual machines over the network
-) Ability to migrate virtual machines from GSX Server to datacenter-class ESX Server
Look at official announcement and first technical documents.
VMware Workstation 4.0.5 (for Linux) review
No, not by me, but by Marcel Gagné at UnixReview. Take a look at this interesting article here.
SUN Solaris 10 will virtualize
Release number 10 of SUN’s Unix is coming and it will introduce many new features. One of the most interesting is so called N1 Grid Containers:
N1 Grid Containers is a breakthrough approach to virtualization with multiple software partitions per single instance of the OS. N1 Grid Containers make consolidation simple, safe and secure.
Superior Resource Utilization. N1 Grid Containers dynamically adjust resources to business goals within and across the container. With little management overhead (less than 1%), it offers over 4,000 containers per system.
Increased Uptime. With N1 Grid Containers, applications are isolated from each other and from system faults. Using Instant Restart, each Container can be restarted in just seconds. Boot time in large systems can be reduced by as much as 70%.
Reduced Costs. N1 Grid Containers simplifies and accelerates consolidation. It also significantly reduces system, admin and maintenance overhead.
Ashlee Vance, one The Register writer, said:
“The containers are Sun’s answer to logical partitions (LPARs) on AIX and HP-UX and the virtual machines touted by VMware/EMC for Windows and Linux servers. The software permits users to carve up a server into multiple partitions and to set up processing, memory and bandwidth limits for each partition.”
Virtual Infrastructure connecting IT to the Business
Googlin’ around I just found a very interesting official VMware presentation about Virtual Infrastructure. I seached in official site but it doesn’t seem to be public (nor in whitepapers neither in webinars). Since it includes Virtual Center prices I think it’s a sales presentation.
It resides on Tomato website (a VMware Virtual Partner) and you can find it here.
Egenera announces agreement with VMware
Yes, I know this is a very old news (November 2003) but just discovered and seems interesting enough to publish it:
Egenera Inc., the leader in next-generation datacenter infrastructure, today announced an alliance with VMware, the global leader in virtual infrastructure software for Intel®-based systems. Under the terms of the agreement, Egenera will offer customers VMware GSX Server bundled with the EgeneraTM BladeFrame® system and will fully support the solution.
…
“With its innovations in PAN architecture, Egenera has moved the systems market into its next generation,” said Peter Sonsini, senior director of alliances, VMware. “Combining VMware’s virtual computing technology with the BladeFrame system enables enterprise customers to improve resource utilization, consolidate servers and streamline administration to lower total cost of ownership”.
Looking at Egenera website you’ll notice they also have a cooperative alliance with EMC, among others.
Dell & EMC preparing low-end SAN
Taken from Neowin:
Dell VP Russ Holt today said the company is working on a “sub-entryâ€� SAN platform for release later this year. Speaking to analysts on a conference call, Holt described the elements of the product: “Aligning with that platform is the delivery of a low-cost HBA solution and a low-cost switch solution, so we we’ll see a much lower cost of entry for SAN solutions.â€�
The small to medium-sized business (SMB) market is considered fertile ground for storage vendors. SAN makers obviously want in: Hewlett-Packard Co. and Network Appliance Inc. are already attacking the market, and startup XIOtech Corp. recently announced a new entry-level SAN.
Holt gave few details about the low-end system, but there have been whispers that Dell and EMC will co-brand two lower-end versions of the Clariion SAN they currently sell. Dell, which manufactures the lowest end of three current Clariion systems that it co-brands with EMC, would manufacture the new system. The two companies earlier this month announced an upgrade of the existing Clariion line.
EMC spokesman Dave Farmer would not confirm a lower-end Clariion is on the way. “We have said we will continue to scale our platform up and down,� he said.
At my eyes this means that EMC is preparing to gain maximum profit from VMware acquisition and is launching a small SAN to eventually bundle with ESX and GSX servers.
This move, if I’m right, will disrupt IBM affairs, usually offering well-known bundle: ESX Server + xSeries + FastT.