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VDI?

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Gardener1

IS-IT--Management
Apr 21, 2009
54
US
I am deploying 10 Pano Logic devices on our network for proof of concept reason the devices are working fine, however backing up this system is proving to be very costly, just to purchase the software your talking thousand of dollars, i was wondering instead of backing the VMWare server up if I buy another server and have an exact copy of all the data from the other server on it. this would serve two purposes 1. no recovery time. 2. cost savings. One problem does anyone know of a method to have two VMWare ESXi servers if one goes down the other can with the flick of a switch take over? all of the software from VMWare cost to much money (vShere witch has vMotion cost to much money).
 
It depends on what exactly you are trying to replicate. Databases?? File Shares??

I hate all Uppercase... I don't want my groups to seem angry at me all the time! =)
- ColdFlame (vbscript forum)
 
unclerico,

I would like to replicate the entire VMWare ESXi v3 server to another ESXi v3 server if one goes down the other takes over. do you know of a way to do this?
 
What about using VMWare High Availability??




Paul
MCTS: Exchange 2007, Configuration
MCSA:2003
MCSE:2003
MCITP:Enterprise Administrator

If there are no stupid questions, then what kind of questions do stupid people ask? Do they get smart just in time to ask questions?
Scott Adams
 
For $3K per site I would like to use some other way VMWare has become to costly to use.
 
I do wonder if it will work for ESXi tho, it is after all a free Virtualisation product from ESX, if you want Enterprise capable Virtualisation you really need to pay for it.

Add to the fact that you can't manage the ESXi box from a centralised management point (ala V-Center) without buying the licence for that.

If you want HA you are going to have to pay for it somehow, whether it's done via Doubletake or VMware themselves.

I also mentioned in the VMware forum that you could always use VCB to do backups via BE (which is your current backup medium) but again that's going to cost unless you want to do it all via scripts (using the VI plugin for BE will be a lot easier).

VI should never be seen as the cheap alternative to physical hardware because it's not, you have to ensure you have plenty of ram\cpu horsepower\ storage etc, more than a normal server would have (our ESX nodes all have 64gb of ram, that's approx £30,000 of ram alone).

Oh and fyi both ESX 3.5 and vSphere have V-Motion, infact ESXi has it... once you purchase the license for it.

You don't virtualise because you want cheap servers, you virtualise to cut down on your server room footprint and power and cooling costs.



Simon

The real world is not about exam scores, it's about ability.

 
Oh and VDI (now called VMware View) is all about Virtual Desktops (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure), it's about having dumb terminals and the OS and processing done on the ESX server.

Simon

The real world is not about exam scores, it's about ability.

 
Simon the Pano devices we have setup are all working on the free version of ESXi the problem with not using vShere is that we cannot create groups so all computer are using one image and we have to setup the verious software that the different users use. If we had vShere we would have HA, vMotion, and would be able to create image groups and control who has access to the different groups.
 
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