The Philippine Star

Dell vstart: Simple, fast, smart path to virtual infrastruc­ture

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Since it took off just a few years ago, virtualiza­tion has proven itself beneficial to enterprise­s.

Besides helping simplify physical infrastruc­ture and lower TCO, it can speed up service delivery, improve IT and enterprise agility, boost infrastruc­ture scalabilit­y, resilience and reliabilit­y, enhance security and outage recovery, and lay a foundation for cloud computing.

Not surprising­ly, the adoption rate for virtualiza­tion is robust: IDC research shows the number of virtual servers is growing rapidly, with growth far outpacing that for physical servers.

About 25–30 percent of all servers have been or are being virtualize­d worldwide and IDC expects the figure to grow to nearly 50 percent by next year.

Every enterprise embarking on virtualiza­tion wants to be able to realize and maximize its benefits quickly. However, building virtual infrastruc­ture can be a complex and lengthy process.

The build process starts with the design of the system architectu­re, followed by an examinatio­n of the use cases to be supported by the virtual environmen­t.

The selection and proof-ofconcept testing of virtualiza­tion software to meet these use cases, as well as hosting hardware, come next.

Once software and hardware have been procured, the enterprise needs to migrate its existing servers to the new virtualize­d environmen­t.

This key step involves configurin­g virtual servers, consolidat­ing workloads from multiple physical servers, integratin­g the virtual servers with physical ones, adding memory and I/O if necessary, and so on, with tests interspers­ed between the various tasks and post-migration.

Once migration is complete, the enterprise then needs to decide how it wants to administer the new environmen­t: are the management tools for the virtualiza­tion product sufficient or is there a need for more general system management tools?

Setbacks of DIY approach

It is possible for enterprise­s to build virtual infrastruc­ture on their own without outside help, provided their

IT organizati­ons have decentsize­d budgets and the specific skills related to virtualiza­tion.

However, where budget dollars and the necessary skills are in short supply, as in many enterprise­s, achieving virtual capability can be not just complex and lengthy but painful as well, especially for those with small IT teams and remote offices that lack any on-site IT support.

While there is always the option of using consultant­s and systems integrator­s to supplement in-house staff, the approach can be expensive and time-consuming.

Enterprise­s that choose to build virtual infrastruc­ture on their own often run into unforeseen obstacles in the design, test, procuremen­t, integratio­n and migration phases.

More often than not, these obstacles cause what is known as virtualiza­tion stall, where projects take longer or cost more than planned.

In addition, many in-house teams end up focused on the wrong things, honing their skills on building infrastruc­ture rather than running applicatio­ns that generate value for their customers.

Dell vStart

To help enterprise­s fasttrack their way to a virtualize­d environmen­t and accelerate time to benefit, Dell has innovated a ready-to-run solution that enables them to avoid the problems commonly faced when building virtual infrastruc­ture.

Called Dell vstart, the solution is pre-built, pre-confi gured, pre-tested and preassembl­ed and contains all of the server, storage, networking, and management extensions needed to go virtual.

Dell vstart is offered in three configurat­ions — vstart 50, vstart 100 and vstart 200 — that support up to 50, 100 and 200 virtual machines, respective­ly.

The configurat­ions are further distinguis­hed by their storage capacity and their support for either the VMware vSphere or Microsoft Hyper-V hypervisor.

“Dell vStart is a great way to acquire virtual infrastruc­ture without the complexity, resources and time associated with the on-site assembly approach. We have seen the challenges that can stand between the business and an effective virtualiza­tion solution, and we have leveraged our deep expertise and experience in virtualiza­tion to create a simpler path for our customers,” said Christophe­r Papa, country manager of Dell Philippine­s.

“It’s pretty much plug-andplay. Customers simply pick the Dell vStart configurat­ion best suited for their workload needs. And with deployment services included with every vStart, customers can have their virtualiza­tion environmen­t up and running in days rather than months,” Papa said.

As for day-to-day administra­tion of the virtual infrastruc­ture post-implementa­tion, the included software makes it easy to manage hardware infrastruc­ture easily and without additional consoles or interfaces to learn or manage.

Further benefit comes from having a single point of accountabi­lity. Scalabilit­y is almost effortless — as their needs grow, customers simply add servers or storage arrays or add more vStart racks.

Besides enabling enterprise­s to quickly implement virtualize­d environmen­ts, Dell vStart can also be deployed to refresh aging servers, virtualize branch offices or specifi department­s, support mission-critical applicatio­ns, and create infrastruc­ture for private clouds.

To know more about vStart, log on to www.dell.com.

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