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October 15, 2009 12:00 AM

New Features in vSphere 4.0

Increased scalability, hot add capability, and much more come to VMware's virtualization platform
Windows IT Pro
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In my last Top 10 column, I covered the top ten new features in Microsoft's Virtual Machine Manager 2008 R2 release. In this column, I'll even out that coverage by guiding you through the top ten features of VMware's new vSphere virtualization platform. Most businesses have adopted VMware as their virtualization platform, but they're still using ESX Server 3.5 and the Virtual Infrastructure 3 management platform. Earlier in 2009, VMware released ESX Server 4.0 and the vSphere management platform as the successors to its widely adopted virtualization products. vSphere and ESX Server 4.0 include several important technological enhancements.

1. 64-bit hypervisor—Although not everyone realized it, the hypervisor in ESX Server 3.5 was 32-bit. As a result, ESX Server 3.5 couldn't take full advantage of today's more powerful 64-bit hardware platforms. ESX Server 4.0 uses a native 64-bit hypervisor that provides significant performance and scalability enhancements over the previous versions. However, the new hypervisor does require a 64-bit hardware platform.

2. Increased VM scalability—ESX Server 4.0's new 64-bit architecture provides significant increases in scalability. ESX Server 4.0 supports virtual machines (VMs) with up to 255GB of RAM per VM. In addition, the vSphere 4.0 Enterprise Plus edition provides support for up to 8-way virtual SMP per VM. The other editions support up to 4-way virtual SMP. These gains are available on both Windows and Linux guests.

3. Hot add CPU, RAM, and virtual disks—This important enhancement in vSphere 4.0 is designed to create a dynamic IT infrastructure through the ability to add CPU, RAM, and virtual disks to a running VM. The hot add capability lets you dynamically increase your VMs' performance during periods of high resource demands.

4. Thin provisioning—This feature is nothing new to Microsoft virtualization users; vSphere now offers a thin-provisioning feature that's essentially the equivalent of Hyper-V's dynamic disks. Thin provisioning lets you create and provision a Virtual Hard Disk (VHD), but the host uses only the amount of storage that's actually required by the VM rather than using the VHD's allocated size.

5. VMware Fault Tolerance—Fault Tolerance is a new high-availability feature in vSphere 4.0. Fault Tolerance works only between two systems. It uses a technology called vLockstep to provide protection from system failure with absolutely no downtime. VMware's vLockstep technology keeps the RAM and the virtual processors of two VMs in sync at the instruction level.

6. vNetwork Distributed Switch—vSphere 4.0's vNetwork Distributed Switch lets you create and share network configurations between multiple servers. The vNetwork Distributed Switch spans multiple ESX Server hosts, letting you configure and manage virtual networks at the cluster level. It also lets you move network configuration and state with a VM when the VM is live migrated between ESX Server hosts.

7. IPv6 support—Another enhancement in vSphere 4.0 is support for IPv6. Many organizations are planning to move to IPv6. vSphere's IPv6 support lets customers manage vCenter Server and ESX Server hosts in mixed IPv4/IPv6 network environments.

8. vApps—vApps essentially lets you manage as a single entity multiple servers that comprise an n-tiered application. Using vApps, you can combine multiple VMs, their interdependencies, and their resource allocations together as a unit. You can manage all the components of the vApps as a single unit, letting you power off, clone, and deploy all the vApps components in the same operations.

9. vSphere Host Update Utility—The new vSphere Host Update Utility lets you centrally update your ESXi and ESX Server 3.0 and later hosts to ESX Server 4.0. The UI displays the status of the remote updates in real time.

10. VMware vShield Zones—VMware's new vShield Zones let customers enforce network access protection between VMs running in the virtual data center. The vShield Zones feature lets you isolate, bridge, and firewall traffic across vCenter deployments.

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