Server Case and Hard Drives/IO

The first thing you need to do is find a nice tower case.  The primary reason for this is drive space.  Now granted, if you are planning to use an eSata drive enclosure full of drives, this probably isn’t as important. One of the most common problems I’ve seen in Corporate America when building out a Virtual Farm is they buy the biggest server with tons of CPU and Memory and then throw only a few drives on the box.  Guess what happens?  Yup, Disk IO constraints.  Trust me, skimp on the disk, and it will QUICKLY become your bottleneck guaranteed! A friend of mine did this recently by building a nice Home Server with tons of CPU and Memory.  He then bought a single 1TB drive and partitioned it 80Gigs for OS and the balance for his Virtual Machines.  After installing just 4 VMs on the box, the performance was awful on the host and VMs.  Just imagine five servers all trying to pull from a single drive spindle. Ouch. So, be sure you don’t skimp on the disk.  I honestly believe it’s one of the most important factors (second only to memory) when building a Virtual Server Host.  Try to put as many Drives into the box as your case will hold.  The more Drive Spindles, the better.  After all, for a few hundred bucks you should be able to get 5-6 500 Gig drives.  You can find them on NewEgg for ~$50 each.  Optimal config would be a Mirror of the System drive and a Raid 10 (if you have a lot of disks) or good ole Raid 5 for the Volume holding your VMs.  If you’re low on disk, just Stripe all the disks into a Raid 5 and build away.

Server CPU

To run any of the Hypervisors out there, you need to ensure you buy a Processor which supports On-Chip Virtualization.  Intel calls this Intel VT and AMD, AMD-V.  Microsoft’s Hyper-V Server 2008, for instance, won’t even run or install on a Server 2008 box without the VT or AMD-V CPUs. Additionally, since this is a home system and you probably won’t be buying a motherboard with four sockets, be sure your CPU has at least two cores (preferably four.)  That way if you go two sockets and w/4 cores each, you should be good to go from a CPU standpoint.

Server Memory

The heart of any Virtual Server Host is its Memory.  Without enough memory, you lose all the gains of being able to host multiple Servers and Desktops on a single Server.  Memory is inexpensive these days. Therefore my recommendation is to install 8 Gigs at a minimum.  That should give you enough RAM to host up to 8 – 10 Mid-Sized Virtual Machines.

Motherboard

Make sure your motherboard supports multiple CPUs (sockets) up to 16 Gigs or more of RAM (that way you can grow the box as needed), plenty of SATA, eSATA connections, and a built-in raid is also a plus. If you can, get Video onboard.  Don’t waste your money buying a big fancy video card for your Virtual Server host.  After all, in most cases, after you build your host you will probably NEVER need to login locally again.  A lot of people think you need a big fancy Video card to do things like Aero over an RDP connection.  That’s plain wrong.  ALL my virtual hosts are headless (no monitor attached) and sitting on a rack in my garage, and I have no problems running my Virtual Vista boxes with Aero Theme via RDP.

Hyper-Visor Software

For centuries (well not that long) VMWare was the ruling king with the ESX product line and management suite… and you paid for it.  On average, it was $5k a CPU.  With the added pressure from Microsoft, Citrix, SUN, and Oracle (yeah, Oracle has a VM product) the King is starting to feel the heat from the pack.  That’s good news for us! The pressure started with Microsoft releasing Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2.  Although not free at first, Microsoft quickly reduced the price to $0.  VMWare responded with the release of VMware Server.  Microsoft then bundled it’s latest Virtual Server called Hyper-V with the Windows Server 2008.  About six months later they released a free stand-alone Hyper-Visor called Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 a direct response to the Stand-Alone Free release of its ESX product line called VMWare ESXi. And that brings us to NOW.  Personally, I run a little of EVERYTHING.  My home lab contains one or more of EACH the products I mentioned above MAINLY because many of my older boxes don’t have the Hardware Requirements.  As far as MY recommendation, here’s what I would suggest in order: And with virtual operating systems, is all the video virtualized so that the card in the box you are RD’ing in from is generating all the video? 2) Yes. The Virtual Guest system is using a Virtual Video card. All the Aero graphics for example is based on the Client initiating the RDP connection. I personally did some testing running a Vista Pro. Desktop on a Windows Server 2005 R2 box on a P3 system. I was able to get Aero enabled dispite the 8 meg video card on the server. It’s ALL ON THE CLIENT SIDE. Hope that helps! I will be checking your blog out again in the future!! Thanks Comment Name * Email *

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