Feel free to contact me also.  My experience with VMware is:

3 years with a consulting firm, heavy vmware work.
Started with ESX2 up till current.
I've configured HA clusters, DRS, Vmotion.
iSCSI, NFS, replication configurations on NetApp and EMC sans.
I currently hold VCP3 and VCP4 certs

In the last 3 years I have over 30 ESX configurations anywhere from single ESXi 
servers to 5+ ESX hosts with SAN storage.

_______________________________
From: tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org [tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org] On 
Behalf Of BRIAN DICHTER [brian.dich...@d214.org]
Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 10:12 AM
To: Tech-Geeks Mailing List
Subject: Re: [tech-geeks] ESXi "Expert" needed

Hi. I'm new to this list but this seems like a good opportunity to jump in. 8)

At District 214, we have implemented a fairly substantial VI3 setup for over a 
year now. I had planned to upgrade to vSphere this past summer but ran out of 
time...hopefully will complete this by either Thanksgiving or Winter break.

Our cluster (started off with three boxes) has seven ESX hosts, three storage 
arrays for shared storage and one physical VirtualCenter Server. Academic 
licensing is a good thing which is why we did go with ESX as opposed to ESXi; 
fortunately we were able to budget for this. We are currently operating more 
than 50 VMs in production (including both Windows 2003/2008 and CentOS 5.4) 
with plenty of excess capacity available. This year, we'll be migrating more 
physical boxes into the infrastructure but usually anything new is 
automatically considered for virtualization. As a result, we are replicating 
SAN snapshots (all iSCSI, btw) over our WAN to an array at one of our school 
sites but are interested in moving that and some other equipment entirely 
off-site eventually. We also have been able to measure a real reduction in 
energy and cooling usage; we've reduced our power consumption by nearly 25% so 
far, for example. Since we do have a high-availability cluster and take 
advantage
  of the vmotion features, we had practically zero downtime for any VMs running 
on the cluster: a few restarts and one goof-up on my part, but in the latter 
case I was able to restore the data completely from a snapshot.

Virtualization has been and will certainly continue to be an ongoing learning 
experience and for people who work in educational environments who often wear 
multiple hats it's difficult to become an "expert" at many things but I think 
we've been fairly successful so far with our deployment. I think the biggest 
expense we had was for the storage but it's been highly reliable. Training is a 
must because there is a great deal of complexity (more hats to wear!).

If anyone would like to learn more about our setup or to pick our brains, don't 
hesitate to contact me. 8)


On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:23 AM, JimHays 
<hay...@sages.us<mailto:hay...@sages.us>> wrote:
OK.  So who's the ESXi expert on this list?  I need to bounce some ideas off 
someone as we are about to embark on the virtualization road.

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--
Brian Dichter
District Technology Systems Supervisor
Township High School District 214
2121 Goebbert Road
Arlington Heights, IL 60005
brian.dich...@d214.org<mailto:brian.dich...@d214.org>
847.718.6565 office
224.688.1863 mobile
847.718.7673 fax

"Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known."
-- Carl Sagan

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