Forrester: Virtualisation Use Grows Sharply

The use of virtual server technology for production workloads has spiked over the past year, according to a new survey from IT researchers Forrester.

Forrester found that 91 percent of respondents to a survey published on Thursday were using server virtualisation for production workloads, up from 78 percent last year.

Increased maturity

The shift shows that the virtualisation market is maturing, said Forrester analyst Andrew Reichman, author of the study “Storage Choices For Virtual Server Environments, Q1 2011”.

“As maturity increases, more critical production applications are being deployed virtually, raising the stakes for getting the architecture right,” Reichman wrote.

He said web and infrastructure applications still top the list of applications running in virtual server environments but database and other more demanding applications are showing a rise.

“Microsoft SQL went from 53 percent virtual deployments to 68 percent, and email went from 29 percent to 51 percent,” Reichman wrote. “Even Oracle databases and applications appear to be on the rise in virtual deployments.”

Storage is one of the main current challenges, with companies reporting that it remains difficult to manage the storage for server virtualisation, Forrester said.

Fifty-three percent of respondents said one of their top storage challenges was effective capacity management, followed by controlling costs, at 39 percent, Forrester said.

Storage challenge

The complexity of the storage architecture for virtual server environments has led storage managers to look at alternative vendors. EMC is still the top storage vendor for virtual server environments, used by 44 percent of respondents, but 38 percent of respondents said they were using NetApp, up from 24 percent last year.

Forrester recommended that organisations use a single vendor for the storage that supports virtual servers, but Reichman suggested exploring alternative storage protocols to Fibre Channel, such as NFS.

“Infrastructure and operations professionals should re-evaluate vendor choices, single-source when possible, and explore alternative storage protocols — and NFS in particular — as cheaper, more efficient alternatives to Fibre Channel,” Reichman wrote.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

UK’s CMA Readies Cloud Sector “Behavioural” Remedies – Report

Targetting AWS, Microsoft? British competition regulator soon to announce “behavioural” remedies for cloud sector

7 hours ago

Former Policy Boss At X Nick Pickles, Joins Sam Altman Venture

Move to Elon Musk rival. Former senior executive at X joins Sam Altman's venture formerly…

9 hours ago

Bitcoin Rises Above $96,000 Amid Trump Optimism

Bitcoin price rises towards $100,000, amid investor optimism of friendlier US regulatory landscape under Donald…

10 hours ago

FTX Co-Founder Gary Wang Spared Prison

Judge Kaplan praises former FTX CTO Gary Wang for his co-operation against Sam Bankman-Fried during…

11 hours ago