VMware vSphere 4.0 Kicks Rivals Into Touch
A host of improvements and additional functions takes vSphere 4.0 ahead of the competition, easing the creation of large scale virtual machine infrastructure.
VMware has changed the name of its flagship VMware Infrastructure to VMware vSphere 4, and in the process has added new switching and management features that raise the bar for x86 data centre virtualisation technology.
The VMware marketing team has been working overtime to promote vSphere 4 as the first cloud operating system, and we were impressed in our First Look. IT managers can safely set aside this breathless chatter and focus on the fact that vSphere will allow IT departments to place application workloads on the most cost-effective compute resource.
vSphere 4 puts VMware well ahead of the virtualisation pack
With its new vNetwork Distributed Switch and support for third-party integrated network switches, including the forthcoming Cisco Nexus 1000v, vSphere 4 removes barriers that made it difficult to implement and manage virtual machine infrastructure on a large scale.
The advances made in this version of VMware’s infrastructure platform also include new linked management consoles, host profiles that ease ESX Server creation and maintenance operations, and enhanced virtual machine performance monitors. (ESX servers are a typical component of the platform, which add management and reliability services to the core server product.) These new capabilities place vSphere 4 well ahead of Microsoft’s Hyper-V platform and open-source projects based on the Xen hypervisor (initially created at the University of Cambridge), and earn the new VMware platform an eWEEK Labs Analyst’s Choice award.
Eyes and Ears of the Platform
The eyes and ears of vSphere 4, the significantly updated VirtualCenter, now called vCenter Server 4.0, still runs on a Windows-based system, which can be either a physical or virtual machine. Large installations will need to also provide access to either a Microsoft SQL Server system or an Oracle database system to store and organise server data.
vCenter Server provides a very handy search-based navigation function that enabled me during tests to quickly find virtual machines, physical hosts and other inventory objects based on a wide variety of criteria. For example, I was able to find physical hosts using more than 10 different characteristics, including power state and virtual machine properties. This is a good tool for quickly locating unused virtual machines and, for IT managers in large networks, is in itself a compelling reason to consider vSphere 4.
In addition to making it significantly easier to monitor and manage virtual machines, vSphere 4, with the vNetwork Distributed Switch, has taken a big step forward in easing the management burden of virtual networks.
Until now, a standard virtual network switch was created and managed on each ESX Server system. Using the vNetwork Distributed Switch, I was able to create virtual switches that spanned multiple ESX hosts.
For large VMware installations, it is hard to overstate the importance of this advance. The time savings alone (in avoiding per-ESX switch configuration changes) are likely to be significant.