Excellent!

Thank you very much.

 

From: James Rankin [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 5:04 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: New to virtualization

 

If you use VMWare, you'll have a VirtualCenter system that manages all
of your hosts and clusters. Some people keep this physical, but you can
virtualize this management system as well.

http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vi3_vc_in_vm.pdf

I'd recommend doing a "parallel" migration for your Citrix users, i.e.
stand up a XenApp 6.5 farm, install the same applications as your old
garm, and allow the users access to both new and old farms through a
single Web Interface (Mr Webster's blog has a good article on doing
this). Then you can get some test users to try the "new" apps, get some
feel for the metrics of your new virtualized systems, and be able to
instantly roll them back to the old farm if you hit any issues.

On 13 March 2012 18:12, David Mazzaccaro
<[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks,

Right now I have 3 DL360s (dual proc, 4GB, 32bit) for 75 Citrix users
and they are taxed pretty hard.

I always get alerts for CPU and RAM, and if I physically check the
boxes, they usually say 200M free of ram, w/ 6GB pagefile in use.

 

What do you mean by "Virtualizing VirtualCenter"?

 

 

 

From: James Rankin [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 11:48 AM


To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: Re: New to virtualization

 

Nothing wrong with virtualizing your Citrix kit, but another thing
you'll need to remember the latest Citrix XenApp version (soon to be the
only supported one, by July 2013) is 64-bit only, so you'll need to do
some heavy app testing to make sure everything will work OK. If it
doesn't, you'll have to invest in some other way of getting at those
apps (VDI, VM Hosted Apps, etc.) Obviously you won't get as many users
on a virtual XenApp system as you do on a physical one (unless your
physical ones are highly underpowered) - I've seen round about 30-40
users per box being a ballpark figure dependent on the RAM and
processing power you throw at the VMs.

The only thing you really maybe need to leave physical is a DNS server,
maybe a DC if you want to be able to log in to the domain when
everything else is down. Virtualizing VirtualCenter (if you go the
VMWare route) isn't that much of an issue.

On 13 March 2012 15:04, David Mazzaccaro
<[email protected]> wrote:

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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"On two occasions...I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr Babbage, if you put
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not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could
provoke such a question."

***** IMPORTANT INFORMATION/DISCLAIMER *****

This document should be read only by those persons to whom it is
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to you. However, if the contents of this email make no sense whatsoever
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you are a mindless cretin; either way, you should immediately kill
yourself and destroy your computer (not necessarily in that order). Once
you have taken this action, please contact us.. no, sorry, you can't use
your computer, because you just destroyed it, and possibly also
committed suicide afterwards, but I am starting to digress...... 

The originator of this email is not liable for the transmission of the
information contained in this communication. Or are they? Either way
it's a pretty dull legal query and frankly one I'm not going to dwell
on. But should you have nothing better to do, please feel free to
ruminate on it, and please pass on any concrete conclusions should you
find them. However, if you pass them on via email, be sure to include a
disclaimer regarding liability for transmission.

In the event that the originator did not send this email to you, then
please return it to us and attach a scanned-in picture of your mother's
brother's wife wearing nothing but a kangaroo suit, and we will
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