You might look at iSCSI or NAS solutions for storage if you do not need the
performance of a Fibre Channel SAN. There is a big cost saving and in the
right environment they work great. Virtualization such as VMware will be of
benefit if you want to consolidate servers. If you have a bunch of servers
that run at 10-15 % utilization then it makes sense to virtualize them. Also
easy to deploy new servers from templates which saves lots of time. If you
have small number of servers which have heavy utilization then stick with
traditional hardware.

Mike

  _____  

From: Tom Miller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 8:05 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Cluster, virtual servers, or traditional?

 

Hi Folks:

 

Over the next year I'll be replacing/moving around most of my servers here
at HQ.  Currently I have "traditional" hardware servers.  I'm wondering at
what point to I need to move, if at all, to clustering/SAN/virtual servers.
At my regional sites (all 50 staff or less) the model will remain a
traditional server hardware.  However here at HQ (6 buildings) I am not so
sure.  I have about 400 staff members here using several servers for e-mail
and file and print, as well as the typical variety of utility, web, and so
on servers.  None of the servers consume a huge amount of disk space for
files or for e-mail (fairly stringent disk space quotas for e-mail).

 

Suggestions?  I'll be moving to Windows 2008, and I thought I read that you
can cluster 2 servers without additional licenses.  I'm not sure about SANs,
since that my be overkill here, and I haven't done anything with
virtualization yet (other than desktop).

 

Reliability is important, but so is cost.  Being a non-profit, I don't have
lots of funds for extra hardware unless I can justify it.

 

Comments and suggestions appreciated.

 

 

 

 

Tom Miller
Engineer, Information Technology
Hampton-Newport News Community Services Board
757-788-0528

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