SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Virtualization

CiRBA compares VMware and Hyper-V head to head

CiRBA compares VMware and Hyper-V head to head

By:   On: 21 Sep 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

It's useful to take an objective view when choosing a virtualization platform, says the company's CTO. Plus, analysts weigh in on strategies for Microsoft of VMware to gain share

This year has been a coming-out party for server virtualization. With several vendors to choose from, selecting a platform for virtualization becomes an issue that’s too important to be decided on the basis of marketing bumf and media hype.

Enter Richmond Hill, Ont.-based CiRBA Inc., with a set of analysis templates to help companies decide which of two leading hypervisors – VMware’s or Microsoft’s Hyper-V – will provide the best bang for the buck for their individual computing environments.

“It’s very useful to take an objective view,” said Andrew Hillier, co-founder and chief technology officer of CiRBA. With so many entrants into the market, “there’s lots of viable choice.”

The analysis templates apply rulesets to the technical requirements of the enterprise, taking into account hypervisor features, operating system and topology compatibility issues and the like. When business constraints are factored in, the comparison “begins to sculpt an answer” to the question of which platform is most appropriate, Hillier said.

“There’s a spectrum from the very technical to business-oriented to financial” in the analysis, Hillier said. The results for each hypervisor are displayed side-by-side on dashboards; one displays the technical analysis, with resource demands, consolidation ratios, power consumption, etc.; the other compares the platforms’ return on investment and total cost of ownership.

“The ultimate decision should be based on the long-term cost,” Hillier said. But there are technical considerations, too.

For example, Hyper-V can’t live-migrate, or motion, virtual machines. “Motioning may be of very high value,” Hillier said. “If it’s a 24-by-seven environment, it’s harder to bring a virtual machine down.”

There are also compatibility issues between operating systems and Hyper-V. For example, some operating systems have different limits to the number of virtual CPUs that can be run per virtual machine, varying from four to only one. Under those circumstances, a company might want to leave the physical server in place or change the operating system, Hillier said.

But businesses may discover that higher consolidation ratios don’t necessarily translate into lower TCO. “Maybe the one requires an extra physical box, but it’s still cheaper,” Hillier said.

Zeus Kerravala, senior vice-president of enterprise research with The Yankee Group, said that while he hadn’t been briefed on CiRBA’s offering, he could see the relevance.

“Any time you can correlate what happens on the IP side or what happens on business or vice versa, there’s value in that,” Kerravala said. “A lot of times something will happen in the infrastructure and you don’t really know what impact it has on the business processes.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1492   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




dwebb

Related Content

Windows 7 is Microsoft's secret weapon against Google
Windows 7 is Microsoft's secret weapon against GoogleIn the battle for desktop application supremacy, Microsoft intends to deploy Windows 7 as a Trojan horse to topple the Google search market empire and beat back the march of Goggle Docs
Clients virtualize beyond recognition
Clients virtualize beyond recognitionClient virtualization is an underlying theme in many recent industry announcements. In virtualization, the external interface of every service becomes unmoored from its implementation in particular physical platforms, operating systems, application frameworks and software components.
Virtualization and the ubiquitous OS
Virtualization and the ubiquitous OSThe interest in Microsoft alternatives such as Linux and Mac OS X is growing stronger by the day and recent events - such as the alliance between Novell Inc. and Microsoft Corp. has done nothing to change this.
Should You Learn Virtualization?
by jason w. eckertits no secret that virtualization is a hot technology today. plenty of companies are implementing it, and vmworld 2007 drew a crowd of over 10,000 people! a few days ago i invited scott elliott, an expert on vmware virtualization, to give a talk in my network security class about the benefits of virtualization.scott spent a good d

Comments (1)

Price advantage is overblown
by Shawn 9/23/2008 12:00:00 AM?If all people want is a cheap hypervisor and make one server look like five, then Microsoft has the advantage of price.? This statement is false, ESXi is free from Vmware and offers the same capability for consolidating servers. If you want centralized management and the enterprise features, you need to pay. But you have to pay extra for Microsoft's management platform - SCVMM as well. Microsoft Hyper-V isn't free, it is bundled with Windows, therefore if you were planning on consolidating free OS's like Linux with Vmware, then Vmware is actually cheaper.
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.