Application Availability Blog

Monday, June 15th, 2009 - 2:32 pm EDT

How Virtualization is Changing the Way We Think About Availability

Posted by: Brian Mullins

Analyst firm The 451 Group has just released some very interesting findings about virtualization and availability in a recent report by Chief Analyst John Abbott. Some of the key take-aways include:

• Virtual infrastructure can form the basis of fully automated availability processes. Availability becomes a default property of the virtual machine.

• ‘Dial up’ levels of availability can be implemented, depending on the requirements of specific applications or departments.

• If a system restore is required after a disaster, it’s usually much easier and much quicker to restore a virtual machine than a physical machine.

• Virtualization infrastructure is already a core component in datacenter automation, unified computing (the bringing together of servers, storage and networking) and cloud computing. Availability services based on top of a virtualization layer will slot right into any of these longer-term initiatives that customers may be working toward.

• Industrial-strength storage networks, currently a best-practice requirement for virtual availability, will lose ground to alternatives, which are maturing.

• The worlds of high availability and disaster recovery are coming together as virtualization is added to the mix.

• Tools more friendly to end users are likely to emerge, reducing the load on enterprise IT support staff, but requiring sophisticated underlay technology.

The 451 Group hosted a webinar a few days ago on this topic, which is available to download for free here: http://www.451group.com/report_view/report_view.php?entity_id=58563 
 

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