>>> Software failure on the VM host is the remaining scare spot

Always a good idea to clone your ESX SD Card every once in a while...

I love these types of conversations on this list FYI :)



Sam




-----Original Message-----
From: Ben Scott [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, December 05, 2011 10:27 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Virtualization - Sizing, hard disk config

On Mon, Dec 5, 2011 at 7:56 AM, Andrew S. Baker <[email protected]> wrote:
> He's going to pay more per GB for local storage than for SAN storage 
> (for the SAN devices being recommended), and he'll have more 
> flexibility for how that space is carved up for VM usage, backups, etc

  Backups are going to external disks which will be rotated off site.
Basically taking our existing backup plan and s/tape/disk/ with it.

  SAN snapshots are nice but are not backups, as Microsoft discovered when
the Sidekick SAN went tango uniform.

  So I'm just carving up the space for the various VMs.  I don't see how a
SAN helps there.  All it does is add significant complexity, which means it
adds failure cases.  "A twin engine airplane has twice as many engine
problems as a single engine airplane."  Redundancy is a very good
reliability technique, but one must take care that the cost (including
non-monetary costs, like complexity) doesn't exceed the benefits.

  If the situation changes and a SAN starts to make sense, migrating VM
storage off DAS to the SAN at that point is easy, for some value of "easy".

> I find it highly beneficial to have two VM hosts.

  I'm not arguing it's not beneficial.  I'm saying for the current situation
it's not cost effective.  It would double my server cost,
*plus* add the cost of the SAN, which for an environment this small is
non-trivial.  That would eat up a ton of budget that I could spend elsewhere
on things that need it more.

  Meanwhile, I can get a 1-hour-typical parts response for 20% the cost of
the single server equipment.

  Software failure on the VM host is the remaining scare spot.  But heck,
reinstalling the entire OS from scratch doesn't take *that* long, and the
nice thing about a Server Core+Hyper-V host is there isn't much to
configure.

  If I had a huge pile of cash just waiting to be spent, sure, I'd go for
the multiple VM hosts and SAN.

-- Ben

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