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Who is John Galt?

Posted by Virtual_JTW May 8, 2008

Ok, now that I have your attention (and no, I’m definitely not John Galt), but since this is my first post, I think it appropriate to give you a little background about myself. After all, why read and/or care about anything I have to say? ;)

I was introduced to VMware like so many others, through Workstation back in 2002. At the time I worked for a 2.8 billion dollar company and had just completed a major Microsoft SMS 2.0 implementation. I was working with a consultant that had it installed on his laptop PC and used it to demo the product developed by his employer.

So then it goes something like this:
That’s a cool product, let me show the boss!
Boss likes it and says, “Why don’t you do some more research on this VMware company and find out more?”
I do the research and discover VMware’s GSX and ESX product lines.
The rest is history. (Don’t you love that line?)

I procured a copy of GSX, set it up and created three virtual machines for one of our internal development teams.
Oh, and I never told anyone what I had done. (Bad boy!)

I used a whitepaper from VMware that describe how to use the same base image for multiple VMs using redo logs. Worked great except when one needed to be rebooted = NTFS no likey.

The dev team never caught on and six months later I finally let them in on the secret. Virtual machine? What’s that? Etc, etc… (I hate giving end-users or customers reason, right or wrong, to blame all of their ills on me!)

Bottom line = pilot successful. From there I got ESX 1.52 approved (now end of 2003 or so), first one host, then two, then four - all with local disk.

Then VirtualCenter 1.0 and ESX 2.0 are released. Please Mr. IT Director, will you approve this requisition for a SAN? No. But please?
No.
Okay then how about you get fired and my team now reports to another director?
Will you, new Mr. IT Director, approve this SAN purchase?
Yes!

Hosts grow to 16 (mixture of IBM 440s, 445s, 3650s, BladeCenter blades); VMs to 500 (powered on) 600+ requisitioned; VMotions = 1000s, SAN (IBM DS4500) = 16TB; every VMworld = attended; VCP2 = achieved. Life if good.

It’s now 2006 and my employer gets acquired by another company. Oh yeah, and the new management doesn’t like any new technology much less virtualization.

Time to move on. So here I am, embarking on a new implementation using ECM Celerra IP storage (iSCSI), HP ProLiant DL380s, VMware VirtualCenter 2.5 and ESX 3i.

I thought I would use this blog to document the good, the bad and the ugly of this next gen VI platform and maybe share some tips along the way. The VMTN forums have been good to me over the years so maybe I can add to the discussion.

That’s it for now. I already have a list of technical stuff to publish. Stay tuned!



Add a comment Leave a comment on this blog post.
May 21, 2008 6:18 PM Reply Chuck Hollis

LOVE the John Galt reference!

How many people do you think know what that's all about? Not enough, I'd argue!!

So, as an EMCer, I can say that we've done our homework in anticipation that your experience with Celerra and SRMwill be a good one. But if it's not -- for ANY reason -- we really want to know.

Good to see you sharing your experiences -- thanks!

May 22, 2008 1:28 PM Reply Virtual_JTW in response to: Chuck Hollis

I don't think many people will recognize it (he, he), but if only one takes the time and and Googles it then mission-accomplished!

I bet if you have a newer Celerra your experience will be even better than mine over-all.

I'm getting mixed reactions from peers on SRM - I don't make decisions based on fear so I'm pushing to at least evaluate it before purchasing it. I'll start testing it just as soon as I get the DART code upgraded which looks to be mid-June time-frame. I'll definitely post the results.

Thanks,
J

Jun 13, 2008 1:21 PM Reply Virtual_JTW

I just received the pricing from my sales rep. for SRM. Seems expensive for a new product, was about 3x higher than I was expecting.
The bundle pricing might be more in line, but that doesn't help if you don't really need the other products.
Now I will be reviewing Lifecycle Manager, Stage Manager and Lab Manager to determine if they make sense in this environment.