Companies fight server sprawl with virtualization

13.02.2006
When it comes to server sprawl, the big picture is bad.

Framingham, Mass.-based IDC expects the number of servers in the U.S. to grow from 2.8 million in 2005 to 4.9 million by 2009. Data centers "are becoming more and more swollen," causing IT costs to rise quickly, IDC analyst Vernon Turner said at the IDC Virtualization Forum, which was in New York last week.

The constant need for more horsepower, and the accompanying expense, are leading some IT operations to slowly turn to virtualization technology.

The IT staff at Deluxe Laboratories, a Los Angeles-based media services subsidiary of Rank Group PLC, manages about 400 mostly x86-based servers, and the count is growing by about 30 percent per year, said Mark Winter, executive vice president for IT.

The company is testing virtualization technology installed by St. Louis-based consulting firm Savvis Inc., but Winters estimated that it will take three years to expand its use throughout the firm.

"I'm getting to the point where I'm having difficulty managing," said Winter. The server growth has pushed the company's ratio of servers to systems administrators to about 30-to-1, far higher than Winter would like. "Right now," he said, "I'm at half the number [of administrators] I need."

Desert Schools Federal Credit Union in Phoenix expects to cut costs significantly by running VMware Inc.'s virtualization software on two two-way, dual-core Opteron-based blade servers, which were installed last week, said Doug Baer, a systems engineer at the firm. Baer said the new systems are expected to handle the workload that is running on the five two-way, single-core Xeon machines they are replacing.

"I can hardly imagine buying another server," said Baer, crediting the virtualization software from EMC Corp.'s VMware subsidiary. "Once you build your virtual infrastructure, you are definitely slowing down your server proliferation."

John Weeks, IT manager at Enumclaw Insurance Group in Enumclaw, Wash., wants to enhance his virtualized environment by adding systems running dual-core Intel chips with the vendor's Virtualization Technology (VT).

Enumclaw currently runs VMware on 40 Intel-based servers, and Weeks said he thinks that running the software on systems incorporating VT would improve virtualization performance significantly.

VT has been included in Intel's Xeon MP chip, formerly code-named Paxville, since last year, but it had been disabled. Intel began allowing users to enable it last week.