Physical Servers vs. Virtual Machines

Though virtualization has become the new normal for businesses of all sizes, physical server infrastructures are still quite widespread. Do you think that the companies using traditional, physical server networks are wasting money? This post will show you why this is exactly the case! But before reading I suggest to watch this educative video.

Let’s start with what we used to have when physical servers were the normal platform of choice. The architecture of a physical server is quite plain. Each server has its own hardware: Memory, network, processing and storage resources. On this hardware, the server operating system is loaded. From the OS you can then run the applications. Pretty straight-forward.

With a virtual infrastructure, you have the same physical server with all the resources, but instead of the server operating system, there’s a hypervisor such as vSphere or Hyper-V loaded on it. The hypervisor is where you actually create your virtual machines. As you can see on the diagram, each VM has its own virtual devices – virtual CPU, virtual memory, virtual network interface cards and its own virtual disk. On top of this virtual hardware you load a guest operating system and then your traditional server applications.

The benefits of virtualization are obvious: Instead of having just one application per server, you can now run several guest Operating Systems and a handful of applications with the same physical hardware. That’s right, virtualization can bring you so much more for your money!

Hardware Independence and VM portability

So what enables a virtual machine to be portable across physical machines running the same hypervisor? As said, every virtual machine has its own virtual hardware. So the guest operating system loaded on a VM is only aware of this hardware configuration and not the physical server’s. In other words, a VM is completely hardware independent. It means that the operation system installed on a VM is no longer tied up to certain hardware and you can easily move virtual machines from one physical server to another or even to another data center!

This makes the VMs absolutely portable! You can copy it to a flash drive, you can bring it home and replicate it at your home lab, you can give it to a friend or send it to your clients! You can even replicate a virtual machine across WAN or across the Internet!

More goodies of virtual machines

We talked about one of the key features that virtualization provides which is virtual machine portability that is possible thanks to hardware independence. It allows you to easily migrate a VM to any place you like: You can back it up and restore on another server, you can put it on your flash drive and run it on your home lab or workstation, or you can even take the VM to another site! But that’s not all! There’s a lot of useful features created by the hardware independence and VM portability:

And this is just the tip of the iceberg! Virtual machines have got much more great features that the traditional physical server-based infrastructure lacks. But in order to make maximum use of that great new functionality brought by virtualization, you should use the right tools for monitoring, managing and, of course, for data protection. Since virtual machines differ markedly from physical servers, the tools designed for the latter are no good for the former. It counts in particular for the backup.

Few materials for those who still need great physical solutions from Veeam:

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