Vizioncore announced vConverter, the fastest, easiest and most reliable tool for performing physical to virtual (P2V) and virtual to virtual (V2V) machine conversions. Customers working with VMware, Microsoft, XenServer or Virtual Iron environments can use vConverter to significantly simplify, automate and accelerate the machine to machine conversion process, maximize system availability and eliminate any potential impact on physical systems. As customers increasingly look to standardize on virtual infrastructures, the reliability and performance of conversion tools are critical factors in ensuring that migration projects are as non-disruptive and require as few man-hours as possible. Server consolidation initiatives often allow only a few hours at weekends in order to perform conversions, so a fast, reliable tool that automates many of the manual pre- and post-migration tasks is critical to achieving maximum successful P2V conversions per time window.
Monday, February 11. 2008
Vizioncore announced vConverter
esXpress Advanced Replication (EAR)
Ron McKelvey (or ronzo) over at PHD Technologies disclosed a new feature of the esXpress backup software. So far the name is EAR (esXpress Advanced Replication). If you have a better suggestion for naming conventions, they're all EARs ;-) Right now esXpress has Simple Replication which can be defined as automatically restoring backups. The more you backup a VM, the more it can be auto restored. Consider Host A, it backs up to your FTP, all VMs once a day, and some VMs more often. Host B can check that FTP for new backups, then restore them. This is currently a DELTA restore, which means if the VMDK is 40 GB, then a new 40 GB VMDK will be created and the backup restored. Simple Replication is basically just a Mass Restore that runs automatically. They’re now getting ready to release the EAR in Beta format. Right now backups are in a Full/Delta methology. As time goes on, the Delta backups get bigger, because they are based on the Full. An EAR backup is just the incremental block level changes done from the last backup. Whether you are making a FULL or a DELTA, an EAR archive is also extracted with just the incremental changes from the last backup. This EAR archive can be send to another NET target (NET only for now).
In the above example, In the above example, I setup Host B to do EAR restores this time. It will search the FTP, find the backup and restore it. If the VMDK does not exist already on the host, then the DELTA backup will be restored, thus creating the VMDK. Then each replicated restore after that will just need to take the EAR file and drop it on top of the replicated VMDK. Host B has been setup to do EAR restores this time. It will search the FTP, find the backup and restore it. If the VMDK does not exist already on the host, then the DELTA backup will be restored, thus creating the VMDK. Then each replicated restore after that will just need to take the EAR file and drop it on top of the replicated VMDK. If your Host B is across a WAN, this works even better, as only the incremental changes need to ever be sent. You can seed Host B by bring the Delta/Full backups physically over and restoring them. Then when you enable the EAR restores, the .ear archives will be applied one by one, bring it up to date (or not as you configure it).
This means that if you backup VMs more often you can replicate them more often. Because this is basically built into the backup engine, it is just another process, much like FLBs. Every time you backup a VM with Delta or a Full, it will also make an EAR file. If the replication gets badly out of syncs, just the previous Delta need be restored, then the EAR files will flow again. And since the replication is based on Delta and EAR files, it is easy to restore a copy of any VMDK from any point in time. This is just the start, the plan will get more complex. Imagine, Doing monthly Full’s, Weekly Delta, and Daily Incremental’s, if you so choose.
Sunday, February 10. 2008
Success Stories : Fidelity Investments about VDI
Fidelity needed a way to rapidly provide desktop computing environments to offshore workers while ensuring the security of sensitive data, and the performance of applications across the WAN. Without Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI), they would have never been able to ramp up as fast as they did in India. Now they’re looking to move their whole user population, offshore and local, to VDI over the next few years.? Says Scott Toenniessen from the Windows Architecture and Engineering team over at Fidelity Investments. FI is an international provider of financial services and investment resources, helping individuals and institutions meet their financial objectives. Serving more than 22 million individual and institutional clients, Fidelity manages more than 300 funds and has more than $1.2 trillion of assets under management.
Thursday, February 7. 2008
SVMotion graphical user interface
Alexander Gaiswinker created a storage vmotion graphical user interface and posted it in the VMware community. Instructions: Install the VMware remote CLI (www.vmware.com/go/remotecli) on a Windows machine to the standard path (program files...) Save the file vms.pl into the C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware VI Remote CLI\bin directory. Save the svmotionGUI.exe somewhere on the machine. Double click it!
Wednesday, February 6. 2008
The VI3 ATDG will debut at the VMworld EUROPE
According to Ron Oglesby, one of the authors if the VMware Infrastructure 3: Advanced Technical Design Guide this long awaited book will be released at the VMworld EUROPE 2008 in Cannes.
We have authors editions now. Full content, no index or TOC and are basically handing some out to "friends and family" as it were. The book is being transferred into final print layout, and if you stop by and see any of us in Cannes this month you will be able to see the hardcopies :-)
Monday, February 4. 2008
White paper on VPIV
NPIV is the acronym for “N_Port ID Virtualization?, a T11 ANSI standard which was developed by Emulex and IBM, to provide the capability for a fabric switch to register several WWPNs on the same physical HBA port. Emulex and Cisco are collaborating with VMware on interoperability and end user education to help both the industry and end users understand the benefits of NPIV technology in a VMware environment. The purpose of this paper is to provide some fundamental insight into NPIV and to help end users discover the practical use cases and deployment scenarios for maximizing the benefits of this new capability.