Virtualization Update Naeill Leigh Production Specialist Data Center – Public Sector [email protected] Presentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc.
Download ReportTranscript Virtualization Update Naeill Leigh Production Specialist Data Center – Public Sector [email protected] Presentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc.
Virtualization Update Naeill Leigh Production Specialist Data Center – Public Sector [email protected] Presentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 1 Current Environment - Poll Who has virtualized servers? Percentage Virtualized? Why did you virtualize? Who has not virtualized servers? Why not? Are you considering it soon? Presentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 2 Explosive IP Traffic Growth Is Stressing the Current Network Infrastructure DATA CENTERS HAVE BECOME THE CORNERSTONE OF BUSINESS… MORE DEVICES MORE APPLICATIONS MORE CONTENT MORE ON-DEMAND ACCESS …WHICH REQUIRES THE ULTIMATE IN HIGH PERFORMANCE NETWORKING © 2009 IDC Nov-15 Evolving Datacenters: Migrating To The Virtualized Datacenter •Extend Where Possible, Optimize New Extend operational lifetimes • Server virtualization • de-duplication, convergence, WAN bandwidth Single rack (POD) approach for new deployments • Email, analytics, virtual desktops Deal with the content and archive problems • SharePoint, tiering, file-based storage •Convergence In the Datacenter Greater integration of network, systems, and storage • © 2009 IDC Converged Infrastructures Nov-15 Evolving Datacenters: Migrating To The Virtualized Datacenter Consolidate Virtualize Automate Provision Self Provision Hypervisor © 2009 IDC Metering & Chargeback Metering & Chargeback Mobility Mobility Mobility Hypervisor Hypervisor Hypervisor Cloud Can the network stay the same? Nov-15 WW Server Virtualization Shipment Forecast, 2005-2014 1M VMs 18M VMs 20,000,000 8.5 VM Cross Over 8.1 7.7 15,000,000 7.3 6.6 10,000,000 3.3 3.0 4.2 5.3 6.1 5,000,000 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 4.5% Shipments © IDC Source: IDC Server Virtualization 2010 2009 2010 2011 Virtual Machines Stand Alone Servers Physical Hosts 2012 2013 2014 23.3% Shipments Nov-15 Server Capability (and Density) Soars 2 apps/Core 1 app/Core 1 app/CPU 40,000,000 1 app/blade 50,000,000 1 app/server Total Server CPUs and Cores 30,000,000 Annual Cores Shipping 20,000,000 10,000,000 Annual CPUs Shipping 0 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 © IDC Nov-15 New Economic Model for the Datacenter Shifts to Automation Tools are a Requirement WW Spending on Servers, Power and Cooling, and Management/Administration $300 $250 Power & Cooling Expense 56 million virtual machines by 2012 Managment Cost $200 Server Spending Virtualization Management Gap $150 $100 $50 $0 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 © IDC Source: IDC Server Virtualization 2009 Nov-15 Virtualization is Very Real…. Q. The default build for new server hardware at our organization is….. Server virtualization is now considered a mainstream technology “Killer App” for the Datacenter Virtualization, unless business case 48% for standalone can be made 75% Virtualization Customers are very bullish on future use strongly recommended Of those virtualizing…. 27% Virtualization suggested 30% of servers virtualized 15% today Standalone 50% in 12 months Core assumptions about infrastructure and datacenter strategies are being turned upside down 10% suggested 0% 10% n=405 20% 30% 40% 50% Source: IDC Server Virtualization 2009, September 2009 © IDC Nov-15 Virtualization Drivers A Look Under the Hood Q. Using a 1-10 Scale, rate the following criteria for their importance in your decision to virtualize your servers. Virtualization Drivers Reduce Power & Cooling Needs Improve Disaster Recovery Simplify Server Management Reduce Server Maintenance Costs Reduce Server Deployment Time Reduce Server Acquisition Cost Improve Availability Increase Server Consolidation Improve Server UT 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% Source: Server Virtualization 2009, n = 405 © IDC Nov-15 The Technology Catalyst: WW Growth 2009-2013 15 10 Efficiency Complexity Elastic Scaling Off Premise 12.4x 8.4x 4.7x 5 1.3x 2.3x 2.5x 2.7x 0 Servers (M) © IDC Blades (M) Cores (M) VMs (M) Data Transactions (TBs) 10G Ports Nov-15 Server Virtualization Impacts Every Datacenter Decision System design ― Hardware assets ― Memory, I/O lead to richer configurations Storage ― Ability to grow networked storage environment inline with virtual server environment a top of mind challenge for customers Networks ― Capacity planning, security and application visibility Management ― 25 standalone servers per sys admin ― 35 virtual machines per sys admin ― Staffing: Don’t expect a drop in the number of admins, but there is an opportunity for staff reallocation ― Capacity Planning: Number of VM’s per physical server expected to double 2007-2012 High Availability ― Mobility tools bring HA capabilities to the masses – truly disruptive Disaster Recovery ― Ability to move VM’s across sites will be fundamental Processes and Best practices ― 30% of IT organizations are implementing ITIL-based processes, and incorporating virtual infrastructure Modularity or Integration? ― Lack of integration an increasing concern © IDC 12 Nov-15 Gartner Identifies Fabric Computing as Preferred Infrastructure for Virtualization and Cloud Figure 2. Which vendor would you perceive to be the most competent to deliver on a fabric-based strategy in your enterprise? Gartner report: Fabric Computing Poised as a Preferred Infrastructure for Virtualization and Cloud Computing, February 11, 2011, George J. Weiss and Andrew Butler Report. ID number: G00210438. You can read the full Gartner report here: http://www.gartner.com/technology/media-products/reprints/cisco/210438.html Presentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 13 Desktop Virtualization Naeill Leigh Production Specialist Data Center – Public Sector [email protected] © 2010 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 14 Desktop Virtualization Refers to the separation of the physical endpoint from the logical desktop Endpoints may be variety of devices; applications are hosted where ever the best user experience is offered (locally at endpoint or data center) Access from the endpoint to the logical desktop is delivered through the network © 2010 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 15 What Is a Virtual Desktop? User 1 PC Hosted Virtual Desktops Applications OS Apps Apps Apps OS OS OS Desktop Virtualization Software Hypervisor User 2 PC Applications Data Center Server OS Network User 3 PC Applications OS Client Device C97-617939-00 © 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 16 What We’ve Heard From Customers… Desktop Virtualization Drivers Flexibility / Business Continuity Data Security Total Cost of Ownership Desktop Virtualization Challenges Maintaining High Quality for Video, Voice Experience Fragmented Solution Set © 2010 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential Return on Investment 17 Trends and Expectations CIO/Superintendant • Teacher/Student productivity • Competitiveness (Enrollment) • Strategic value through TCO IT: Server Manager The Evolving Workplace Landscape: • Control, manageability, and security • Reduction in new deployments and data center sprawl • Initial purchase and lifecycle costs Heterogeneous end-point devices IT: Desktop Manager/RESA • Control, manageability, and security/standards • Deployment speed and versatility with reduced costs • Near-native experience Mobile workers Geographically dispersed resources Windows 7 migration End User/Student/Staff Data leakage and loss prevention • Geographically dispersed users expect LAN performance • Anywhere, Anytime, Any Device • Alignment to Existing Desktop Experience C97-617939-00 © 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 18 Desktop Virtualization Challenges Data Center Virtual desktop density, load, transfer rates and boot storms Greater reliance on networked storage – SAN and storage costs Session encryption increasing CPU overhead and solution costs Increased system availability and business continuance needs Deployment and Scalability Greater need for simplified and streamlined virtual desktop provisioning Administration of desktop and virtual machine-level network, policy, and security Need for integrated management of virtual and physical infrastructure Remote Users and Rich Media Poor performance over WAN, affecting remote and mobile employee productivity High bandwidth consumption reduces VDI user density and increases solution costs Increased use of media-rich applications Startup Costs Initial CapEx implementation costs Efficiency of managing virtualized data center environments Increased WAN costs (100 to 384 kbps per VDI user) C97-617939-00 ©©2010 its affiliates. All rights reserved. 2010Cisco Ciscoand/or Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates. Cisco Confidential 19 VDI Growing in Importance IT Trends Diversity of form factors Increasing upgrade and maintenance costs Globalization Cost-effective and ubiquitous broadband Cost-effective and optimized data center hardware Enterprise runtime with virtualization Growing trust in the cloud C97-617939-00 ©©2010 its affiliates. All rights reserved. 2010Cisco Ciscoand/or Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates. Cost Advantages Potential savings of 70% in ongoing maintenance costs Affects 30% annual spending on hardware and software acquisition Effective use of data center resources Productivity Cisco Confidential Footprint Deployment by more than 50% of companies More than 50 million desktops by 2013 More than 10% total penetration by 2013 with 92% CAGR Growing traction with smartphone and tablet deployments 20 Questions ? C97-617939-00 © 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 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