David: of the physical servers, if you had your druthers and could
isolate the tasks out to an individual server, how many servers would
you really have?  Or are all those servers only doing one task, already?

Well, my first Domain Controller (up until last week, was my ONLY DC) is
doing all this:

Windows Server 2003 Standard SP2

Domain Controller (holds all 5 FSMO roles)

Global Catalog

DNS

WSUS 

File Shares (My Documents redirection, all shared drives)

GFI Vipre Antimalware server

Symantec Backup Exec 10d 

 

The remaining boxes are pretty much dedicated:

BES (dedicated)

OWA (dedicated)

Exchange 2003 (dedicated)

3 Citrix 4.0 servers (dedicated)

SCO UNIX billing server (dedicated)

MAS200 (also Citrix licensing server, web interface server, terminal
services profile storage)

Document imaging (also my 2nd DC, and print server)

 

 

 

 

From: Jonathan Link [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 2:49 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: New to virtualization

 

If I were doing licensing from scratch, I'd go Datacenter, even
accounting for the CPU licensing, it's not all that much more.  The
ability to add and move servers, "thinly" provision servers, etc makes a
a much more robust environment.

 

When I say thinly provision servers, I mean, making a server responsible
for only one task, such as AV management, BES, whatever, without putting
additional duties on it as is common in a physical server environment.

 

David: of the physical servers, if you had your druthers and could
isolate the tasks out to an individual server, how many servers would
you really have?  Or are all those servers only doing one task, already?

On Tue, Mar 13, 2012 at 12:20 PM, Ralph Smith
<[email protected]> wrote:

"However, if I went w/ 3 Windows Datacenter licenses, for a small
increase in price - I would get unlimited VMs? "

Datacenter is licensed per CPU - those are dual CPU servers so you would
need 6 Datacenter licenses.

 

From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 11:04 AM


To: NT System Admin Issues
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


.

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