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server virtualization


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DEFINITION - Server virtualization is the masking of server resources, including the number and identity of individual physical servers, processors, and operating systems, from server users. The server administrator uses a software application to divide one physical server into multiple isolated virtual environments. The virtual environments are sometimes called virtual private servers, but they are also known as guests, instances, containers or emulations.

There are three popular approaches to server virtualization: the virtual machine model, the paravirtual machine model, and virtualization at the operating system (OS) layer.

Virtual machines are based on the host/guest paradigm. Each guest runs on a virtual imitation of the hardware layer. This approach allows the guest operating system to run without modifications. It also allows the administrator to create guests that use different operating systems. The guest has no knowledge of the host's operating system because it is not aware that it's not running on real hardware. It does, however, require real computing resources from the host -- so it uses a hypervisor to coordinate instructions to the CPU. The hypervisor is called a virtual machine monitor (VMM). It validates all the guest-issued CPU instructions and manages any executed code that requires addition privileges. VMware and Microsoft Virtual Server both use the virtual machine model.

The paravirtual machine (PVM) model is also based on the host/guest paradigm -- and it uses a virtual machine monitor too. In the paravirtual machine model, however, The VMM actually modifies the guest operating system's code. This modification is called porting. Porting supports the VMM so it can utilize privileged systems calls sparingly. Like virtual machines, paravirtual machines are capable of running multiple operating systems. Xen and UML both use the paravirtual machine model.

Virtualization at the OS level works a little differently. It isn't based on the host/guest paradigm. In the OS level model, the host runs a single OS kernel as its core and exports operating system functionality to each of the guests. Guests must use the same operating system as the host, although different distributions of the same system are allowed. This distributed architecture eliminates system calls between layers, which reduces CPU usage overhead. It also requires that each partition remain strictly isolated from its neighbors so that a failure or security breach in one partition isn't able to affect any of the other partitions. In this model, common binaries and libraries on the same physical machine can be shared, allowing an OS level virtual server to host thousands of guests at the same time. Virtuozzo and Solaris Zones both use OS-level virtualization.

Server virtualization can be viewed as part of an overall virtualization trend in enterprise IT that includes storage virtualization, network virtualization, and workload management. This trend is one component in the development of autonomic computing, in which the server environment will be able to manage itself based on perceived activity. Server virtualization can be used to eliminate server sprawl, to make more efficient use of server resources, to improve server availability, to assist in disaster recovery, testing and development, and to centralize server administration.

Learn more about Reducing IT costs with server virtualization
Understanding the benefits of a virtual machine: Virtual machines offer many benefits: server consolidation, increased utilization and faster recovery times after failure.
How server consolidation benefits your data center: Server consolidation benefits include greater computing efficiency, lower power and cooling costs, and the flexibility to migrate workloads between physical servers.
Guest virtual machine and host server definitions: We cover the two components of a VM -- the guest virtual machine and the host server -- in this installment of the Virtualization Explained series.
Analyze server virtualization software pros and cons: This exceprt compares vendor-neutral overviews of server virtualization software from an application and performance perspective.
Acquire greater system automation with virtualization best practices: By creating greater system automation, virtualization can pre-empt many administrative tasks and enable user self-management.
Obtaining maximum ROI from virtualization: Virtualization cost-saving strategies targeted at hardware, infrastructure, software and utilities increase the ROI of an implementation within the first six months.
Server virtualization beginner's guide: This virtualization primer introduces virtualization from a business user and data center environment point of view. The first section offers an overview of virtualization, from what it is to how it ...
Quiz: Virtualization vocab: Too busy to learn? No way! Take this quiz on your lunchbreak and bone up on the basics of virtualization terms.
Server Consolidation: Reporter Joan Goodchild talks with industry analysts and virtualization evangelists about the pros and cons of using virtualization technology for server consolidation.

LAST UPDATED: 03 Nov 2009

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More resources from around the web:
- Microsoft has a home page for its Virtual Server 2005.
- A Forrester research paper is called "When to Use Server Virtualization and Workload Management."





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