At a high level you have all the components you need. 

Boxes to run ESX
SAN
Licensing

The specifics are open to debate based on your environment. All of the 
things you pointed out are variables that only you can make an informed 
decision about based on the current environment and how you see it 
evolving over the next ~3 years.

Storage for the SAN
Number of new servers added to the environment
Capacity of current infrastructure

Some things to think about. 

FC vs iSCSI. 
VMWare vs HyperV
Disaster Recovery

In a smaller environment where you may not necessarily need all the bells 
and whistles, Hyper-V is very attractive and may save you $$$. Also I 
highly recommend going to the Data Center license if you can, then  you 
are covered for the OS licenses if you do decide to spin up more boxes. 



Christopher Bodnar 
Enterprise Achitect I, Corporate Office of Technology 
Tel 610-807-6459 
3900 Burgess Place, Bethlehem, PA 18017 
[email protected] 




The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America

www.guardianlife.com 







From:   "David Mazzaccaro" <[email protected]>
To:     "NT System Admin Issues" <[email protected]>
Date:   03/13/2012 11:33 AM
Subject:        New to virtualization



Hi all,
I am starting to investigate moving our aging network infrastructure into 
the virtual world.
~ 10 servers, 6-7 years old
Windows 2003 domain
Exchange 2003 
Citrix 4.0 farm
~190 users
After some initial discussions w/ a reseller, here’s what they are 
recommending:
(3) DL 380 G7 servers (to host the VMs) ~$18,000
(1) Net App FAS2240 (this is the SAN that would host 12 600GB drives of 
storage for the VMs) ~$20,000
VMWare essentials plus kit (VMware software) ~$5200
(3) MS Windows 2008 R2 Enterprise (this would allow the 3 HP servers to 
run 4 Windows 2008 VMs each)
I guess the way it would work is that the VMs would reside on the SAN, and 
the 3 hosts would call up the SAN to load each VM utilizing the host’s 
CPU, RAM, NIC, etc.)… right?
I have meetings scheduled w/ 2 other vendors, but verbally both have 
started the conversation along the same path as above.
Being very new to VM, does the above scenario seem to make sense?  
It is hard for me to imagine all that traffic going between the SAN and 
the host servers w/o creating a huge bottleneck (over gig Ethernet)
Do people recommend virtualizing every server?  
Domain controllers? Exchange? Citrix farm (4 server)?
Shouldn’t something be left physical?
Is 7 TB of storage enough (probably only 3 usable after array config)?  
Is the net app a decent appliance? $20k sounds cheap to me…
I have done a little more reading, and from what I understand w/ 3 Windows 
Enterprise licenses, I would be limiting myself to 12 VMs.
However, if I went w/ 3 Windows Datacenter licenses, for a small increase 
in price - I would get unlimited VMs? 
Which would allow for actually having a testing environment, and better 
patch deployment?
Thx

.
~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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