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| Home > Networking News > Server, storage virtualization is a network problem: Are you prepared? | |
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But there are challenges involved. Virtualization management strategies and tools are new, and networking pros are still learning what works. What's more, many network administrators don't have the training and preparation to work in virtual environments. Then, network managers must also find ways to break down IT silos within the enterprise in order to effectively manage and troubleshoot in virtual environments. In an interview with Burton Group senior analyst David Passmore, SearchNetworking.com associate editor Tessa Parmenter asks the questions networking pros need answered about managing and troubleshooting networks in a virtual environment. To get a glimpse of Passmore's session at Catalyst, "Addressing Complexity: Networking for Dynamic Virtualized Servers and Storage," Parmenter asks why IT silos need to be broken down, what vendors are doing to help enterprises and how the challenges of virtualization present network administrators with an opportunity that could either make or break their careers. Can you explain the challenges that network administrators face as they attempt to ready the network and management tools for virtual machines that work in accordance with physical machines?
David Passmore: Virtualization really affects the data center more than in other places. For example, if you look at a data center environment that's running VMware, VMware now allows virtual machines to move from one physical server to another, and somehow the network has to be able to track that. The network has to know that the virtual Ethernet address of a virtual machine has moved from one server to the next -- the same with the IP address of the virtual machine or of a particular application.
This is requiring tighter coordination between the networking people in a data center and the people who administer the servers, or the storage. Enterprises have to worry not only about coordination but about changing the workflows. Whenever a new application is provisioned within a data center, what sequence of activities is required now to make sure that the network connectivity is in place before the application boots up for the first time? These challenges are more significant now because data centers are very dynamic and virtualized. It means the networks have to be equally flexible. That's right. I've heard that in order to make virtualization work, IT silos must be broken down – especially among networking, systems, storage and security. Is this unification actually happening? How long do you think it will take for IT silos to be unified?
With virtual OS and virtual applications, who needs VMs?
More seriously, they're having to become familiar with new technology -- like virtual machine hypervisors -- and learning that they may now find themselves saddled with virtual Ethernet switches that are implemented in server software -- something they never had to deal with before. There used to be physical hardware Ethernet switches; no one ever thought of an Ethernet switch as being something that you could implement in server software. What specifically are IT networking professionals missing, and where do they find training in virtualization? What is your assessment of the efforts network equipment vendors are putting into their products to help network managers deal with dynamic data centers? Are technologies like Cisco's Nexus 1000V virtual switch moving us in the right direction? How long do you think it will be until there are solid virtualization product choices in the market?
Depending upon the kind of enterprise customer you are, certain vertical industries are more risk averse than others. Some of the more competitive industries may be forced to migrate to this relatively quickly because they have significant cost or capacity pressures; whereas others, like parts of the financial services industry, may want to lag behind because they're far more concerned about the security and stability of their infrastructure, and they'd rather wait for other people to be pioneers -- like the engineering and scientific computing verticals. What does it mean to say that a dynamic, virtual environment reflects the "risk appetite" of an organization?
On the other hand, the rewards are also greater in that you'll be able to buy a third as many servers. You may have the flexibility to load balance so that you can better accommodate peak demands for application processing. It allows you to get by with less storage than would be required otherwise. A lot of that is being driven, pure and simple, by economics. Going with virtualization technology is often a way to save money.
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