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I didn't get a chance last week to draw attention to the nice video that Marc Farley put up on the InsideIT blog last week about our TechCenter web chats. Marc is a regular attendee of our weekly chat sessions and he is also the lead blogger on InsideIT. The video is cool, short, and just as relevant this week as last. This week's chat (Tues 3 PM CST) will be about when to select blades for your virtualization server platform.

Todd

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Oodles of NICs for ESX

Posted by ToddMuirhead Jun 2, 2008

Back in the ESX 2.5 days it was a common recommendation to have at least 3 NICs for ESX. One NIC each for the service console, VMotion, and VMs. It was really a waste for many to have to dedicate an entire NIC for the low network traffic to the service console. Then with ESX 3 the networking features became more flexible, and you could easily setup the service console to share a NIC with VMotion or the VMs.

The M600 and M605 blades for the Dell M1000e blades chassis now have two on-board NICs and the option to add two more I/O cards, each with two ports of either Ethernet or fibre channel. This means that you can have four NICs and two fibre channel ports for storage OR six NICs with 2 dedicated to iSCSI for storage. The four available NICs for VM data traffic is usually enough, although I admit there are always exceptions.

So if the I/O options on the blades are not enough there are options with the R805 and R900 and R905 that offer oodles of NICs. Specifically the R805 has four on-board NICs and four PCI slots. Filling these slots with your required mix of quad-port NICs and dual-port fibre channel HBAs would be a great solution for environments that have high requirements of physical NICs to support their VMware environment.

Todd

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A recent thread here on delltechcenter asked for a power consumption comparison between the PowerEdge 1950 1U rack mount server vs the PowerEdge M600 blade. It turns out that there are a few whitepapers that have been done on 2950 power consumption and a big study on the blades power consumption - but nothing I can find that directly compares the two. The best way to get a comparison between just about any current or recent Dell server is to use the Dell Datacenter Capacity planner. It allows you to build out a rack of servers and get an estimate of power consumption.

If you use similar configurations for 16 PowerEdge 1950s and a full M1000e chassis (16 blades) then the blades configuration will consume less power. So you can save a significant amount of power by going with blades over similar traditional rack mount servers.

If you combine the efficiencies of the blades with the efficiencies of running lots of VMs on a single physical server - you might have the ultimate in power efficiency. This is one reason to use blades for virtualization - we'll be chatting about this and other reasons next week in our TechTuesday chat.

Todd

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The Best Server for You

Posted by ToddMuirhead May 19, 2008

For the past three weeks, we at the Dell TechCenter have been focused on the decoder ring for systems management. Starting today we are going to tell you what the best server is for virtualization. The reason it is going to take three weeks is that the answer for everybody is different. So we are going to talk about key factors, advantages of one type of server over another, and learn from the decisions and thought processes of each other. We are simply hosting the conversation and I do not have a "favorite server" -- although I must admit that I used to lean heavily towards 2-socket servers.

The decision for most seems to come down to 2-socket, 4-socket, or blades servers. I hope that we end up expanding the conversation and talk about lots of other possibilities including storage options, hypervisor options, and who knows what else.

In order to get things going are going to have some chat sessions, there is a topic home page, and a server selection matrix page to specifically lay out the facts about each type of server. I've started the page off with 2-socket, 4-socket, and blades as server categories with some basic tech specs and advantages for each type. This page will grow as additional pros, cons, and others ideas come up.

Todd

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