ESX

To Virtualize or Not to Virtualize: A SMB Debate

I was recently reading an Information Week B-Mighty article on SMB Virtualization, where the author mentions that VMware believes SMB customers (defined here as sub-10 physical server) are either jumping in full force, or not virtualizing at all. He also spoke with Dell GM for SMB, Erik Dithmer, who mentioned that customers would save little or no money at all on virtualization. Dithmer must be basing his math on the process of shared storage in a virtualized environment vs. individual server storage on the non-virtualized path. I would actually present an alternate solution to the problem for a user with less than 10 physical servers in their company today.

Physical

On Dell.com today, I can purchase a R710 for $999 at street price. This will be my baseline for a physical server solution. Multiply this by 10, and we have a $10k price tag. To build a proper disaster recovery scenario in a physical world, you need to both backup and replicate your data from one physical location to another. The least expensive backup option I can select is Commvault, at $549 per server. The least expensive replication scenario I can find is a 5-pack of Double-take for $2499. So, at a very minimum, a physical server disaster recovery scenario is going to run you $10k +$5500 +$5000 = $20,500.

Virtual with SAN

Best practice for a disaster recovery scenario including shared storage is for there to be 2 equal SAN arrays on either side of your disaster recovery location. At a minimum, it is required to have 2 servers in your primary location for failover activities, and a single machine in the disaster facility for run-time operations. Once again, I went out to Dell.com to prove out Erik Dithmer’s hypothesis.

Although Dell markets a Virtualization in a Box config listed at $12,999, that configuration contains 3 R710 servers which only have a single socket, rendering most of the features VMware offers like Virtual SMP and CPU affinity fairly useless. So lets config this the old fashioned way. Dell offers the R805 online ($4500) as the “Virtualization” ready choice, so the standard configuration has dual quad-core Opterons and 8GB of memory, when coupled with VMware’s Memory overallocation capabilities, gives it the same performance as 16GB of RAM in physical systems. The shared storage component of this equation brings in the big question mark. Do I go with the MD3000i, iSCSI SAN on both sides for about $5000 each and add the $3500 per ESX server Commvault and $2500 per 5-VM Doubletake ($25,500 total) or do I go with two Dell Equallogic arrays, which have free replication software but would still need the Commvault (well over $25k).

So with the two scenarios side by side, Dithmer is correct that virtualization can in fact be more expensive than business as usual based on some assumptions.

The Third OptionVeeam Backup and Replication

Virtualization is the right option for so many reasons, a few of them including encapsulation, isolation, and portability. The ability to get a VM back up in running in minutes versus hours to rebuild a physical box is definitely the soft dollar value that most people know it is. But how do you accomplish these SLAs without requiring the large capital investment in shared storage? Or how do you leverage something like the Dell MD3000i, which comes in at roughly $5000 a piece in a proper DR strategy? The answer for me is Veeam Backup and Replication 4.1 with its virtualization capabilities. At a retail price point of $599 per physical ESX socket for unlimited VM backup and replication, you have the opportunity to get your disaster recovery scenario under control immediately. Veeam has the capability of backing up local storage, VMFS datastores on iSCSI and deliver those backups to pretty much any data storage site you can see. Veeam’s replication includes the capability of replicating ESXi to ESXi systems as well, so the security of ESXi can also be covered. So in the above scenarios, you can configure your hardware any which way you like for a DR scenario and still get accurate backups and replications.

Let’s take a look at the minimum virtualization configuration capable of accomplishing the DR strategy. Let’s use 3 virtualization capable systems with the R805 ($4500) plus 6 total sockets of Veeam Backup and Replication 4.1 ($3600). The primary location will have two R805’s, each configured to backup to each other’s local storage. The primary systems would also replicate to the DR location in case of site failure, and your data would be contained in two places. Mission accomplished, 10 VMs backed up and replicated for under $14,100. That is roughly $6,000 less than the 10 physical servers in a customers environment. It also takes no consideration for the reduction in energy usage, number of parts that might break, or any of the other environmentals of a data center.

In summary, Veeam Backup and Replication can save your SMB business significant costs when implementing virtualization.

New Veeam Essentials Bundle

While there’s been a lot of talk this past week on Free ESXi (more on that later) I wanted to take some time and explain the new Veeam Essentials bundle and our reasons behind it. We view our Veeam Essentials bundle as a great entry bundle for the small business just getting into virtualization using VMware vSphere. As you may know, VMware has introduced a very attractively priced vSphere bundle called VMware vSphere Essentials, this gives you vCenter and up to 6 sockets (3 hosts) for just shy of US $1,000. If you think about it, that’s a lot of power for not a lot of clams. Think how many physical servers you can virtualize on 3 ESX(i) hosts…way more than 3. For more information, check out VMware vSphere Pricing.

So, for just shy of 1K you get fully licensed vSphere. This is great but it still leaves you without an efficient backup and recovery tool, single pane of glass monitoring or detailed reporting…enter Veeam Essentials bundle…offering Veeam Backup & Replication, Veeam Monitor and Veeam Reporter for around US $2,000 (Americas pricing). The Veeam Essentials bundle is fully functional licensed versions of those 3 products for 6 sockets (3 hosts).

Of course Veeam is placing some limits on this bundle…

  • Must be purchased with VMware vSphere Essentials (or proof of VMware vSphere Essentials must be given)
  • Each bundle will only support 6 sockets. This means that even if you purchase multiple bundles, each Veeam product will only work on 6 sockets, you’ll need to install other instances with the other license(s) to manage the other VMware vSphere Essentials vCenters.
  • Each bundle is 6 sockets, no less (sorry folks, you can’t get it cheaper for only 4 sockets)

What does all this mean? For just under US $3,000 (hardware not included) you get 6 sockets of VMware vSphere, 6 sockets of Veeam Backup & Replication, 6 sockets of Veeam Monitor and 6 sockets of Veeam Reporter. That’s 3 servers with up to 8 cores (2×4) and 256GB RAM each running VMware ESX(i). Couple that with a free iSCSI solution such as Starwind and now you’re talking 2 TB of shared data for free (hardware and Windows licensing not included).

I did not include Support and Subscription (SnS) above because for VMware vSphere Essentials it’s optional (it’s not optional on VMware vSphere Essentials Plus). Veeam’s Essentials bundle includes 1 year of support and upgrades in the list price.

Now, let’s discuss a few things about the Free Version of ESXi. We’ve gotten a number of questions on this since we released the “news” and the Essentials bundle on the same day. Below is a simple table explaining what is and isn’t supported:

Table of compatibility:

ESX Version

Current Customers As of June 3, 2009

Future Customers

ESX/ESXi 3.x licensed

+

+

ESX/ESXi 4.x licensed

+

+

ESXi 3.5 free

+

-

ESXi 4.0 free

-

-

+ = supported/usable
-  = not supported

Now please note that Veeam will not be supporting ESXi Free 4.0 at all. If you’re a current customer using Veeam Backup & Replication for ESXi Free 3.x, please contact your Veeam ProPartner or sales person for vSphere options.

While I don’t endorse or condone any of the following, I thought I would be doing an injustice if I did not include links to the community’s reaction to our announcement regarding dropping ESXi Free support. The list below is just some of the reaction, be sure to read the comments in each as well.

Rick Vanover at Virtualization Review

Rich Brambley at VMETC

Eric Scholten at VMGURU.NL

Gabes Virtual World

Search Server Virtualization’s Alex Barrett

Rich Brambley at VMETC again after Alex Barrett’s post

Search Server Virtualization’s Eric Siebert

Edward L Haletky’s The “soon to be launched” Virtualization Practice

The comments to my post on the original announcement

Update: June 12, 2009 – New Links

Bridget Bothelo over at Virtualization Pro

Discussion over at ars technica (I noticed this in my referral stats)

Update: June 15, 2009 – New Links

Search Server Virtualization’s weekly Podcast: VMware cuts free ESXi hypervisor support, fuels battle vs. Hyper-V

Update: June 26, 2009 – New Link

Mike Stokes over at eGroup

Update: July 3, 2009 – New Link

Tom Howarth over at PlanetVM

Mike Laverick from RTFM

What a Difference a Year Makes

This interesting little tidbit was just brought to my attention by one of my very alert Systems Engineers. It would seem that when customers do case studies, you should follow-up with those customers to make sure the case study is still valid because a lot can change in one year.

February 2008 – Customer does a case study

March 2009 – Same customer does another case study, this time for Veeam

If you read the one from 2008, then the one from 2009 (for Veeam) can you draw a link as to who the “competitor” is referenced in the 2009 Veeam case study?

We all know this virtualization market is highly competitive and many people have asked how Veeam can claim that we’re #1 for VMware backup. I think the example above speaks for itself. Let me know what you think in the comments!

Host Profiles Today

In case you haven’t heard, Veeam has released Veeam Configurator 2.0 Beta. While some of the functionality of the original Configurator is still there, the major improvement in 2.0 is the idea of configuration templates for your ESX hosts. The template functionality works with ESX 3.x, including ESXi.

Many of your who attended VMworld 2008 in Las Vegas may have attended sessions on what’s coming up from VMware.  While I can’t go into details, one of the features announced was Host Profiles, check out a video from VMware here.
With Veeam Configurator 2.0 Beta you can get some of that funcationality today.  Configurator 2.0 allows you to do the following with VI3:
  • Scan your entire Virtual Infrastructure and create templates for each unique host configuration discovered for both network and storage
  • Scan your entire Virtual Infrastructure and create reports on differences of any host that does not have the same configuration as a template
  • Apply a template to any host to bring its configuration back in line
  • Undo the apply template opperation in case something goes wrong
Check it out today by downloading it and letting us know what you think.
Veeam is #1 for VMware backup