SSDs...

Cheers
Ken

From: Erik Goldoff [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, 3 November 2010 8:56 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Recommendations for cheap and cheerful virtual server

I might recommend that whatever 'cheap' hardware you find it has multiple drive 
slots.  Dedicate a single drive to each VM as one thing I've found on 
older/slower hardware is multiple VMs contending for the same disk IO could 
become your obvious bottleneck regardless of installed memory and CPU.  I've 
gotten better results with a single VM per volume/disk, at the very least to 
avoid head thrash delays, and sometimes benefit from separate IO ( like with 
multiple ESATA interfaces ) before it hits the mobo aggregation.

That said, I haven't used a decent SCSI based array because it always added too 
much $$$ to the 'cheap' test hardware.

Erik Goldoff
IT  Consultant
Systems, Networks, & Security
'  Security is an ongoing process, not a one time event ! '
From: James Rankin [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 4:40 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Recommendations for cheap and cheerful virtual server

I have recently overhauled my home systems and installed a NAS device and some 
new laptops....however, due to the neglect my AD and SCOM skills are currently 
receiving, I have decided to get myself a few virtual systems fired up at home 
to ensure I don't go too rusty.

I'm looking for a cheap and cheerful system that can run either ESXi or 
XenServer (or even Hyper-V), probably to host about 8 or 9 VMs (not all in use 
at the same time, though). I guess the kicker is the storage, as I won't be 
using my NAS device for this. I'd prefer something small and inobtrusive, 
although that's in the ideal world. I read an article where someone recommended 
getting hold of an old Compaq ML110 G4 and adding some SCSI disks, so I'd also 
be willing to re-use some second-hand stuff, if needs be.

I can back up the VMs to an external drive (if it is supported) so I wouldn't 
be looking for any hardcore redundancy measures in the hardware.

Anyone have any thoughts, or care to share what they are using for similar 
setups?

TIA,



JRR



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

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