White Paper: The Benefits of An Outsourced IT Infrastructure
The Times Efficient It Supplement
1. This supplement is an independent publication from Raconteur Media
July 2009
EFFICIENT IT
The journey
continues
For smart CIOs, the current
economic climate offers an
opportunity to shine, writes
Steve O’Donnell
W
here next for effi- from bloated IT infrastructures and As a result, many CIOs may now feel rent focus on driving costs out of the virtualisation needs to become an
cient IT? It’s a ques- deliver more efficient, high-quality that they have little room left to move current infrastructure. They need to overarching data centre design prin-
tion plenty of CIOs IT services to the business. on the cost side of the equation. radically rethink how IT resources ciple, rather than a handy way to ad-
are asking right now. For many, that has involved funda- What the situation calls for is a are sourced and utilised, in order to dress immediate tactical issues. Sec-
After all, those who have done their mental shifts in their approaches to whole new, ‘super-charged’ approach make a quantum leap in efficiency. ond, automation needs to become
jobs well in the last few years have architecture, to sourcing and to or- to efficient IT. It’s not enough for For many, that will mean delving
already done much to drive out cost ganising available talent to best effect. CIOs to simply maintain their cur- deeper into three technologies. First, continued on page three
Growing pains A cloud of our own Walls come tumbling down
As digital information explodes, how are smart Organisations reluctant to release private data When data lives in the cloud, traditional approaches
companies using information management to onto public IT infrastructures can still reap to information security no longer offer adequate
get the most out of storage capacity? page 4 the benefits of cloud computing. page 8 protection from threats. page 14
Three’s a cloud
EMC, Cisco and VMware come together to shape the future of computing - centre pages
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4. 4 EFFICIENT IT
Growing pains
As digital information explodes, how are smart The decade preceding the recent
economic slowdown was defined
companies preparing to take the strain? by untrammeled spending on stor-
Gareth Kershaw reports age. During those years, the cheaper
storage capacity became, the more
I
companies seemed compelled to
n 2007, the ‘digital world’, consist- In fact, the explosion of digital in- buy. Now that the financial outlook
ing of all the data produced and formation is just one of the problems is less positive, it’s time for business-
replicated across the globe, was with which IT professionals are hav- es to be more realistic. Gareth meatyard (emC):
estimated at 281 exabytes, or 281 ing to contend. At the same time, they “Users need seamless
billion gigabytes (GB) in size by ana- are also wrestling with new legal and Time for a reThink access to archived content
lysts at IT market research company regulatory demands that dictate what In fact, it’s a case of “back to the future” and proactive information
IDC. That’s around 45GB of informa- data must be kept, for how long and for storage and information manage- management”
tion for every person on the planet. By how quickly it must be retrieved. And ment, says Dr Graham Oakes, an in-
2011, they predict it to grow to over ten they must find smarter, more innova- dependent technology consultant who
times its current size.
The technology industry is no
tive tools and technologies to address
these challenges, against a backdrop of
has provided advice on storage strate-
gies to organisations including Oxfam,
hittinG the mail on the head
stranger to unrest and upheaval - but widespread IT spending cuts. government-owned savings bank Na-
for many organisations, keeping pace As a result, current pressures demand tional Savings & Investments (NS&I) One of the most visible symbols of the explosion in digital information,
with that kind of growth has become a complete reassessment of information and the Office of the Deputy Prime email can also be one of the trickiest to manage. As a communications
more onerous in recent years than ever management strategies at many organi- Minister. Organisations must revert medium, its availability is now taken entirely for granted by users at
before, putting skills in information sations. And that will be no easy to the more stringent levels of scrutiny most companies; but for hard-pressed IT departments, the storage and
and storage management to the test task – particularly because that were applied to purchases back management of emails pose a number of significant challenges.
and pushing demand for storage it will require a complete when storage media and systems were For a start, emails need to be auditable, searchable and easily retrieva-
capacity to new heights. break from recent practice still relatively costly, he says. ble for operational and compliance purposes. Email systems, meanwhile,
when it comes to mak- In fact, those organisations that don’t are expected to be up and running 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and
ing storage and in- take a step back from rampant storage 365 days a year. Business users now find it almost impossible to do their
formation manage- acquisition and haphazard informa- jobs without it, so stringent business continuity plans are paramount.
ment investments. tion management practices may floun- That’s perhaps why many organisations’ email management strate-
der sooner than they expect. Many data gies have moved beyond basic back-up to a more holistic approach,
centres are rapidly running out of space based on wider information management principles.
and power, so while UK firms need to For a start, strong archiving practices are a must-have, says David Par-
grow their storage capacity, many can’t kin, director of sales for EMEA at security specialist Sunbelt Software.
expand beyond their current physical “Approximately 80 per cent of businesses now use email for closing
or energy footprint. orders and performing transactions, making them subject to statutory
As a result, they will be forced to get records retention requirements. But exactly what should be stored and
more not only from existing storage how long for is poorly understood by most businesses,” he says.
systems, by boosting utilisation rates In fact, robust information managment policies should be applied long
and jettisoning redundant and dupli- before the archiving stage. For example, it’s particularly important to elimi-
cate information, but also from avail- nate duplicate copies of emails before the archiving stage, which is why
able data centre space, by consolidat- organisations are increasingly deploying de-duplication technology, which
ing storage capacity into fewer, more scans each email, assigns it a unique tag (much like a fingerprint), indexes
efficiently utilised systems. and retains it. Redundant or duplicate copies are simply deleted.
“Now, more than ever, cost containment is a key concern. Data re-
a Three-pronged aTTack duction technologies for primary data and secondary copies of data
In the drive for greater efficiency, say (backup and disaster recovery copies) can help drive down costs by
industry watchers, organisations will using less storage, and can, perhaps, extend the useful life of cur-
battle that storm on three fronts: com- rently deployed solutions,” says a recent Gartner report.
plexity, cost and automation. Just as vital is the ability to retrieve email rapidly - especially im-
In terms of complexity, for example, portant if a regulator or potential opponent in a law case comes
there is a notion that high-profile initia- knocking. That’s why many companies, particularly those working on
tives like storage consolidation and vir- e-discovery projects, are prioritising access and availability of stored
tualisation have greatly simplified and emails, says Gareth Meatyard (pictured above), product specialist for
demystified storage infrastructures. EMC’s recently announced SourceOne products.
“Users need seamless access to archived content and proactive in-
formation management to help with litigation readiness, including
a central archive to accelerate large-volume discovery searches and
enable secure legal hold,” he explains.
The EMC SourceOne product family is a suite of information gov-
ernance and integrated content archiving solutions that share a com-
mon goal: to help organisations manage their information resources
intelligently – for the highest return on investment, at the lowest risk,
and for maximum competitive advantage.
Within this family, EMC SourceOne Email Management aims to sup-
port proactive e-discovery, email retention policies and cost-efficient
tiered storage in high-volume email environments. It provides all core
email archiving capabilities for Microsoft Exchange and IBM Lotus
Notes/Domino environments, as well as instant messaging.
“Many of the email archiving solutions written ten or more years ago
have been challenged to meet very large mailbox environments (that is,
50,000 or more mailboxes),” says Laura DuBois, an analyst at IT market
the growth in research company IDC. “The larger the environment, the more strain
corporate information the system architecture faces from ingestion performance, indexing
is putting both skills speed, database scalability, index integrity, as well as search and policy
and storage capacity management.” EMC SourceOne Email Management, she adds, “offers
to the test at many a next-generation archiving architecture to meet these challenges.”
companies
5. EFFICIENT IT 5
Chris Gabriel, director of solutions With file-level deduplication, for ex- value. In ‘storage tiering’ scenarios, “Many users implement the static storage needs to take all three ‘storm
marketing at systems integration com- ample, one copy of a file is retained says Ryan, “current data can be stored approach and combine this with the fronts’ into account. But wider eco-
pany Logicalis, notes that, without the as a reference and all other copies of on high-performance disk drives and most common element of active tier- nomic conditions notwithstanding,
right “mindset”, such technologies can the file are replaced with a unique older data can be archived to very ing – archiving,” says Ryan. “Tradi- it’s a great time for companies to be
spawn more information manage- identifier, or ‘pointer’, to the file. “This large, lower-performing drives.” tionally, data was archived to tape and thinking about re-architecting their
ment problems than they solve. “The approach lends itself well to data re- When it comes to implementing stor- optical media, but current legislative storage infrastructures, because the
thing is, virtualisation ain’t new and tention policies, where retention age tiering, organisations can choose a requirements make these unsatisfac- efficiency gains and increased val-
– shock, horror – it’s actually not that requirements are applied to the ref- static approach or an active approach tory for rapid information retrieval, ue that can be achieved will make
clever,” he says. “Yes, it allows you to erence copy and adopted by all appli- – or a combination of the two. e-discovery and other modern booby- maximum impact on efficiency-
put more [data] onto less [storage], cations using the file,” says Ryan. In a static scenario, different types traps,” he says. focused businesses.
and in today’s increasingly data-based Object-level de-duplication, mean- (or ‘volumes’) of data, relating to Which bring us to the third key tar-
lifestyle, that’s undoubtedly a benefit. while, can be applied not just to a the same application, are stored on get that CIOs are looking to address:
However, in having access to seeming- single file, but also to collections of different disk drive types. So the automation. Darren Thomas of Dell
ly endless storage capacity, it’s easy to files. “This type of de-duplication is log files, index files and tables that calls it “the factor that’s truly driving
get lazy and slip back into bad habits.” usually associated with compliance make up a database – but which are today’s market”, taking its place along-
The point, he says, is that it isn’t how projects,” he says. accessed with different degrees of side more established information
a company stores its data, it’s how it Finally, block-level de-duplication frequency – all reside in different management drivers of “scale, capac-
manages it that makes the difference. breaks data into small blocks, or places. “We refer to this as ‘static’, ity and performance”.
If companies wish to tackle the sec- ‘chunks’, and assigns a unique identifi- because the different volume types Today’s storage automa-
“
ond issue – cost – then it’s time they tion technology aims
stopped treating their storage systems to take day-to-day
like a garage, “a place they chuck things
because they don’t want to throw any-
thing away”, says Darren Thomas, glo-
Enterprise storage systems storage decisions and
tasks out of the hands
of hard-pressed IT
bal vice president and general man-
ager for enterprise storage at systems
company Dell. Instead of old bicycles
are full of junk data that will staff and automati-
cally allocate data and
information to dif-
”
and boxes, he says, enterprise storage
systems are full of junk data that will
never be needed again.
never be needed again ferent storage tiers,
according to pre-de-
fined rules relating to
Here, data deduplication technology their business value.
can be a big help, according to Dennis er to each chunk, says Ryan. This kind will always reside on their respec- Automation tools for
Ryan, partner sales development man- of de-duplication, he says, is largely tive disk types, rather than move be- storage virtualisation,
ager at EMC in EMEA. This works to relevant in back-up and restore envi- tween tiers,” he explains. thin provisioning and
detect and eliminate information that ronments today. In active scenarios, by contrast, data tiered storage are three
is already stored elsewhere in an organ- The cost issue can also be tack- regularly moves between tiers of stor- hot tickets in this space.
isation’s storage infrastructure. led by using storage disks of varying age, depending on a number of fac- A more intelligent
Today’s deduplication can work at performance and capacity to store tors, with “age being the most com- approach to informa-
a number of different levels, he says. information according to its business mon”, says Ryan. tion management and
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7. EFFICIENT IT 7
virtualise to capitalise
The benefits of virtualisation are an issue that no
organisation with an eye on efficiency can afford to
ignore, says Guy Clapperton
rotterdam, where city officials are keen advocates of virtualisation
I
t is a medical fact that only a rela- the financial sector that has embraced number of servers, each needing power on the way to cloud computing. “One of are used, there may be issues for either
tively small part of the human this model of computing [first].” to run and cool them, while most are sig- the big issues with cloud computing so far the user or the vendor or both regard-
brain is used during the average The IT industry is now eyeing the mid- nificantly under-utilised. Virtualisation has been the use of proprietary cloud plat- ing data security, privacy and other legal
lifetime. Nobody knows what market as the next likely area of massive addresses this problem by enabling busi- forms, which make it very difficult for an compliance,” he says. “Since virtualisa-
purpose the rest is meant to serve. growth. “Virtualisation has come to the nesses to simultaneously run multiple, IT department to move their workloads tion depends upon moving data around
It would be wrong to say the same fore over the last five years as computing isolated workloads on one physical server, into the cloud,” he says. “Then you have the world, perhaps splitting it up and
rule applies to computers, but it’s true power far outstrips what the operations so several applications can be safely hosted the problem of vendor lock-in, whereby a sending it to different locations, depend-
that the tasks of an individual PC – or systems and the applications that run on one box. This leads to better utilisation customer that has gone to the effort of re- ing on capacity, use and bandwidth, then
an array of servers, or any other com- atop them are capable of,” says Millman. of the hardware, reducing the amount of writing an application for the cloud finds it’s much more difficult for the user to
bination – may be better served by boxes needed, resulting in far greater en- it too difficult to change providers.” know where the data is held. ”
‘virtualising’ a system of software onto BOOSTING UTILISATION RATES ergy efficiency. The more virtual servers Because virtual machines are hardware It gets even more complicated when
another physical system. It’s happened because the technology to you can run on one box, the more energy independent and portable, he says, virtu- the data holder is regulated by the fi-
So, on a corporate level, a massive multitask without harming core tasks saved, so density and efficiency is key.” alisation can help customers to move their nancial authorities, he adds, in which
amount of storage might sit on physi- has become available, making IT systems Solid business benefits start to ac- applications between their own data cen- case, different regulations will apply in
cal systems at a remote location that far more efficient. “Servers run with crue quickly when this sort of technol- tres – or the internal cloud – and external different territories.
are shared with another enterprise, many more processing cores than before ogy model is in use. Take, for example, clouds. “This idea of federation between In a period when increased efficien-
making one set of servers work as two and thus utilisation of these resources the City of Rotterdam, which employs internal and external clouds based on vir- cy is a major corporate goal across the
‘virtual’ sets. has been low. The need to run one appli- some 1,000 people in its Dienst Steden- tualisation is where we are focusing a great board, however, the benefits of virtuali-
On a much smaller level – the small- cation per operating system so it doesn’t bouwe en Volkshuisvesting (DS+V) deal of our development efforts,” he adds. sation remain clear. On the face of it, it’s
est possible – your correspondent is interfere with other apps means that, for department and is responsible for town Inevitably, there are a handful of cave- a no-brainer. Does your enterprise want
writing on an Apple computer that has the most part, the server is idling. Virtu- planning, housing and traffic. ats. Chris Coulter is a partner at City law- to buy hundreds of servers and systems
a virtual PC running in one window, so alisation solves that problem, with many In 2004, the department implemented yers Morrison & Foerster and, although - or tens that can behave like hundreds,
one computer is acting as two. operating systems running on the same the open-source operating system, Red he recognises the considerable benefits with all the savings in time and energy
That idea is catching on at many server without each operating system in- Hat Enterprise Linux 3, for a few appli- of virtualisation, he has concerns. “De- that go with that? For many CIOs, it’s not
businesses, but the main benefits have stance impacting on the other.” cations, but stuck with a combination of pending upon how [virtualised systems] an issue that requires much thought.
been noted at the higher end so far, Vendors of virtualised solutions con- Windows and Unix for the main plat-
says Rene Millman, senior analyst with cur. Serguei Beloussov, chief executive of form, using 40 servers to run the com-
Gartner. “This has made a beachhead
in the large enterprise, where server
Parallels, which also works in the related
cloud computing arena, points to the
bination of Microsoft, Unix and Linux.
When it came to putting a new adminis-
the virtualisation promise
utilisation has traditionally been low many downsides of having a dedicated tration and registration application in for
and organisations are looking to ex- server for every mission-critical applica- the City’s real estate activities, however, With a virtualised environment, organisations have the opportunity
tract maximum usage from their in- tion in every department: “This approach the Council started looking at a virtual- to get their entire IT infrastructure running as a single pool of highly
frastructure,” he says. “As usual, it is has led to organisations accumulating a ised system based exclusively on Linux. efficient computing resources.
After a period trying the system on a
pilot basis, the organisation migrated its One application per operating system no longer applies
From virtualisation to the Cloud servers to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and
was able to use virtualisation to run 10
virtual machines across just six servers.
Having embraced virtualisation, some organisations are using early The council used Red Hat Global
wins in the area to start exploring cloud computing in more depth. One File System for storage virtualisation
example is the Pensions Regulator, the UK government body charged and Red Hat Satellite Server for faster
with overseeing work-based pensions schemes. There, virtualisation deployment of both physical and vir-
technology from VMware has allowed IT staff to decommission over 40 tual systems on the network.
physical servers and cut power and cooling costs by 30 per cent. “One of the key benefits of Red Hat
It’s a great start, but the journey is far from over, says Ray Heffer, techni- Enterprise Linux 5 with virtualisation
cal infrastructure manager at the Pensions Regulator. “Perhaps the most is that we can install and roll out a new
critical service we support is a pensions web portal, ’Exchange’, for pen- application in 60 minutes to all our
sions scheme administrators across the country, and we have already systems, compared to four hours per
taken steps towards a cloud approach to support this, using VMware.” system previously,” says Hennie Stam,
The physical infrastructure and virtualisation technology needed to sup- senior system administrator at DS+V.
port the 24x7 portal is provided by a hosting provider, he explains, “but
crucially, we can monitor and maintain the virtual machines running on WHO OWNS THE CLOUD?
that infrastructure centrally, as if they were within our own data centre.” Others see further potential benefits. Fre-
“This has been such a success that we are now looking at using this host- drik Sjostedt, director of product mar-
ing facility for offsite disaster recovery purposes in the future,” he adds. keting EMEA at virtualisation company Source: VMware
VMware, believes this is a staging point
9. EFFICIENT IT 9
First, it enables organisations to
dramatically increase the utilisation of
that physical infrastructure. “In many
companies, utilisation rates for servers
and storage systems hover at around
10 per cent. The virtualisation capa-
bilities of a private cloud infrastruc-
ture can push these up to 70 per cent
plus. So straight away, you’re reducing
the costs associated with information
management and storage.”
Second, with the appropriate informa-
tion management tools in place, he says,
organisations can move that informa-
tion around the infrastructure, accord-
ing to that information’s overall value
to the business. “In a private cloud, data
can be moved and manipulated more
freely - that could involve, for example,
the migration of data from operational
systems to a data warehouse. An organi-
sation that can achieve more agility with
its information is in a better position to
analyst and interpret it. In other words,
they can more easily turn data into in-
formation.” (For more on information
management and storage challenges, see
article on page 4, ‘Growing pains’.)
Naturally, any talk of cloud comput-
ing raises inevitable questions about
data security. How do you lock down
data when it resides not behind a tra-
ditional firewall and subject to stand-
ard network security approaches, but
somewhere out there in in the cloud?
Approaches are emerging that aim to Thomas Bittman, Gartner
tackle this issue head-on, but for now,
it’s sufficient to say that organisations
need to move to a model whereby the
security of data and information takes
WhAT The AnAlysTs sAy
priority over infrastructure-centric
approaches. (For more on security in “The business wants cloud computing, because it wants fast time-
ontrol over corporate information virtualised environments, see article on to-market and to pay only for what it consumes; that requires IT
page 14, ‘Walls come tumbling down’.) resources to organically adapt to the business and deliver com-
ing companies taking their first step organisations have this already and Either way, the private cloud trend mensurate economics. An internal cloud provides businesses with
with experimenting with both and then are achieving huge efficiency gains as is clearly one that no organisation can the same assurance that the specific safeguards and processes that
looking to tie the two together, so that a result (for more on this, see article afford to ignore. The advice from ex- govern the business are being applied. Before this, you could get
content and information that is com- on page 7, ‘Virtualise to capitalise’). perts is to start small. “In this economy, one or the other, but not both. An internal cloud accelerates the
mercially sensitive stays private, but “Architecturally, an internal cloud few companies can afford to invest in a evolution of your virtual infrastructure to a true utility model and
commodity services can be purchased isn’t that different from a virtualised massive internal cloud. You will likely your IT department to an internal service provider. So embrace this
from a provider and delivered at a scale-out infrastructure in today’s en- limit your cloud to a small set of sys- trend and leverage it to transform your organisation.”
changeable rate, according to need.” terprise. Both are composed of a col- tems, since the cloud’s frequency of use James Staten, Forrester Research
Virtualisation lies at the heart of lection of servers, topped with either a and total capacity needed won’t entire-
any private cloud architecture. Many grid engine or a virtual infrastructure ly be known and every IT investment “I believe that enterprises will spend more money building pri-
based on hypervisors,” says Staten of needs a clear business case today,” says vate cloud computing services over the next three years than buying
Forrester Research. Staten of Forrester Research. services from cloud computing providers. But those investments will
But private clouds differ in two Many organisations will need help also make them better cloud computing customers in future. Build-
key respects. First, in a private cloud, with that, says Aad Dekkers, chief ing a private cloud computing environment is not just a technology
developers deploy new applications marketing officer at MTI Europe. thing - it also changes management processes, organisational cul-
es a data centre that offers more efficiency to the cloud via a self-service portal, “Virtualisation that covers servers, ture and relationships with business customers. And these changes
control and choice. That element of choice without needing the help of systems storage, networking and desktops will make it easier for an IT organisation and its customers to make
vital element in a private cloud environ- administrators to configure a server involves a range of skills that can good ‘cloudsourcing’ decisions and transitions in future.”
nt, because if organisations are going to for them. They simply configure a test the in-house resources at even Thomas Bittman, Gartner
n external services too, then the industry ‘virtual machine’ themselves. large organisations, which is where
to work together to ensure that public and Second, and arguably more impor- a trusted partner can help.” “The cloud is at its core nothing more than flexible hosting. It has
ate clouds can work together and are built tantly, private clouds offer a hefty dose of The most important thing, howev- three core attributes: cost, control and performance. If it doesn’t have
ndustry standards. Nobody wants to move automation, that frees systems adminis- er, is that organisations get that start cost advantages, there is no point in doing it. If control isn’t adequate,
cloud environment that locks them into a trators from manual administrative tasks, under their belts as soon as possible. it can’t be secured (creating an inexpensive way to get folks fired). And
icular infrastructure or provider, or forces “such as determining the best placement After all, says Staten, the economic if performance drops, the cost savings can’t be justified. Given that the
m to re-write applications. That defeats the of new workloads and optimising the value of an internal cloud “rises with cloud is based on dynamically shifting loads across wide distances and
ect and purpose of cloud computing. virtual pool to make room for more ap- its use, which normally means invit- locations, it would seem that the network is, in fact, the central critical
plications,” says Staten. (For more on data ing as many applications as possible.” path. You can’t forget the servers, anymore than you can forget the
BINAR centre automation, see article on page 13, At his company, analysts are in- structure in a new house, but you focus on optimising the network so
ate Cloud – The future shape ‘Just keeping the lights on’.) creasingly seeing a cross-over between that your cost, control and performance needs are met. Other parts
loud computing What this amounts to is an IT infra- data centre virtualisation and auto- comes to mind, and they are the virtualisation and storage layers. Infor-
nesday 29 July 2009 structure primed to manage and store mation, and the multi-tenant, scale- mation from all three - the virtualisation platform, the storage platform
burgeoning volumes of corporate out infrastructures of cloud comput- and the network - need to be optimised to assure that the resulting
VMware, Cisco and EMC for an overview information in a more efficient way, ing. “There’s a good reason there’s so cloud system performs to specification.”
discussion of the “Private Cloud” vision says Adrian McDonald, vice president much hype around cloud computing Rob Enderle, The Enderle Group
cluding a full review of how the technolo- of EMC’s UK & Ireland operations. right now – it’s the fulfilment of an
of today provide the building blocks for “What we’re ultimately talking about architecture we have all been seek- For insight from IDC market analyst Chris Ingle on how cloud comput-
cloud computing of tomorrow. is freeing up information from its ing for many years, a shared pool of ing and virtualisation can boost business continuity, please see article
tration and full agenda at www.emc.co.uk/vce-webinar physical infrastructure,” he says. infrastructure resources that flexibly on page 11, ‘A better way to defeat downtime’.
That has two important benefits. accommodate business services.”
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21982_FUJ_Ants_AD_264x338mm.indd 1 10/7/09 15:11:47
11. EFFICIENT IT 11
A better way to defeat downtime
Virtualisation is helping companies to achieve the goal of ‘business as usual’ more
efficiently than ever before. Chris Ingle of IDC explains
I
f one was asked to summarise Virtualisation holds out the promise of fails, and there is no failover provision,
the benefits of virtualisation in a big reductions in the cost of minimising the application will be taken out of op-
single sentence, the increasingly downtime, whilst simultaneously ena- eration until the server can be restored.
popular mantra of “do more with bling very significant increases in levels of In a virtual environment, virtual ma-
less” would get pretty close. In fact, application performance and availability. chines (VMs) can be created in pairs
in the early stages of virtualisation at (For more on virtualisation, see article on that run in lockstep, but on different
least, most organisations seem happy page 7, ‘Virtualise to capitalise’.) physical servers – a passive machine es-
to “do the same with less” – content Let’s have a look at four different sentially mirroring the active one.
with the apparent “immediate ben- business continuity situations which In the event of an unexpected hard-
efits” of significant cost reductions illustrate how virtualisation can de- ware failure that causes the active, pri-
through server consolidation. liver on this “breakthrough” prom- mary VM to fail, the secondary, formerly
However, as we look beyond server ise when compared with traditional, passive VM immediately picks up where
consolidation, and consider the im- physical IT environments. the primary left off, and continues to
pact of virtualisation on wider busi- run, uninterrupted, and without loss of
ness processes, the promise of “do- Server maintenance network connections or transactions.
ing more with less” starts to become Most downtime is planned. It’s a sim-
clearer. And as many organisations are ple requirement to shut down many Workload management
starting to realise, business continuity operating environments when main- Less visible than server failure, but of-
is a critical IT discipline where the op- tenance or implementation of new ten just as costly over time, is the is-
portunity to actually achieve the feat features are planned. sue of workload management. High
is particularly strong. In a virtualised environment, vir- levels of utilisation can significantly
Many observers still equate business tual machines with applications run- affect the ability of an application to
continuity with disaster recovery – en- ning can be moved in real time to oth- perform, with costly consequences
suring operations keep going when er servers, without any disruption to where the application is performing a
the entire data centre burns down. service levels. This means that server mission-critical function.
Essential as it is to plan for extremes, maintenance tasks can be performed In a physical environment, the applica-
almost all the cost and risk addressed
by business continuity is in fact the
at any time of day (or night), with
zero scheduled downtime.
tion is entirely dependant on the resourc-
es of the server on which it operates. Ei-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
result of more common instances of ther server capacity has to be provisioned
application downtime. Mundane as it Server failure at all times to cope with peaks in activity Chris Ingle is consulting director, systems research with IDC, and co-
may sound, anyone who has experi- Unplanned downtime arising from – meaning wasted resources at all other author of the 2009 white paper, “virtualisation and Business continu-
enced a prolonged shutdown of their hardware or software failure can be times – or the business has to incur the ity”. A full copy of this document is available from www.emc.co.uk/bc
email system, or simply slow network very costly to a business. cost of degraded performance or even
performance, will immediately un- In a physical environment, an operat- failure at times of peak activity.
derstand the damage to productivity ing system and the applications it sup- In a virtual environment, VMs that re- framework for disaster recovery, the DR application files still demand time and
(and morale) that even short episodes ports are highly dependant on the server quire extra processing capacity can be re- process in a virtualised environment is processing bandwidth, which should
of downtime can cause. on which they are hosted. If the server deployed, with no interruption to other far faster and easier than in a physical not impede the performance of a
hosts, affording them greater perform- environment, where installation, recon- highly utilised server.
ance. This process is typically automat- figuration and testing of restored OS In a virtualised environment, there-
SEAmlESS TRAnSITIOn ed, with pre-set business rules dictating
at what point and to which destinations
and applications is a laborious process.
A virtual environment can poten-
fore, critical back-up processes will
need to be re-examined and changed
overloaded VMs will be redeployed. This tially recover a system in hours rather where necessary. Back-up to disk and
In the event of unexpected hardware failure that causes an active, reduces both the cost of outage itself and than days. A traditional system can take data deduplication are increasingly
primary virtual machine (VM) to fail, the secondary, formerly passive the cost of staff required to manage the many hours to rebuild the operating coming to be perceived as essential
VM picks up where the primary left off. rebalancing of workloads. system and application configuration. components of a high-performance in-
In the case of virtualised systems, the formation infrastructure environment.
large-Scale diSaSter back-up of the complete virtual ma- The processes themselves will be highly
Although large-scale disaster recov- chine can be directly restored without automated and intelligent; scheduling
ery is rarely invoked, the potential operating system or application rein- and provisioning will be driven dy-
impact of such a disaster may be stall, requiring much less testing. namically in real time by predefined
enough to risk putting the company business rules; and applications are
out of business. adequate preparationS restored in an order that reflects their
Virtualisation can dramatically From the discussion so far, it will hope- importance to the business.
reduce the costs associated with pro- fully be clear why virtualisation can bring The overall end-game of combin-
visioning for, and executing, disaster about significant improvements to busi- ing server virtualisation with a highly
recovery processes in two main areas. ness continuity performance, optimising efficient and automated data manage-
The first is cost of the recovery en- levels of assurance to the business within ment infrastructure, is to enable the
vironment. In a physical environment, the limits of acceptable spend. IT function to move beyond the in-
a full mirror site has to be maintained However, the benefits of server vir- effective and wasteful policy of equal
in the event of partial or total failure of tualisation with regard to high avail- business continuity provisioning for
the main production site. This can be ability and data protection may be all applications.
prohibitively expensive. In a virtual en- severely compromised if the wider In this scenario, provisioning can
vironment, the seamless portability of information infrastructure is not ad- fall short of real requirements for
VMs means that different (physically equately prepared. highly critical applications (creating
separate) parts of the production en- Data back-up offers a prime ex- risk) and conversely can be unneces-
vironment can be used to host mirror ample. A defining benefit of virtu- sarily high for non-critical applica-
copies of VMs from other parts. This alisation is the significant increase in tions (creating waste).
makes the provisioning of the recovery server utilisation rates. But this means It is this fundamental shift from
environment more cost-effective in that if, for example, a virtualised static, “highest common denomina-
terms of both cost of infrastructure and server increases its average utilisation tor” provisioning to dynamic, in-
cost of management. This is obviously from 20% to 70%, its spare process- telligent provisioning, that enables
best practised across multiple sites. ing capacity is no longer available as virtualisation to truly deliver on its
Source: VMware The second area is cost of recovery a performance buffer. Back-up and promise to help organisations “do
process: By providing a fully automated replication processes of databases and more with less”.