Server Virtualization: Virtual Machines to Exceed Physical Systems in 2009

Posted by Sarah on May 21, 2009

IDC says the adoption of virtualization in Europe has confirmed that the technology is significantly impacting the server market, and “even more so the way datacentres are and will be built and managed.”

According to IDC the number of server systems shipped with a virtualization platform reached 358,000 units in 2008 and, it says, “the accelerated adoption on the x86 side of the server market is making virtualization a crucial factor, changing the approach of suppliers and the deployment habits of customers throughout Europe.”

Giorgio Nebuloni, research analyst with IDC European systems and infrastructure solutions, says that in 2008, approximately 18.3% of all servers shipped in Western Europe were virtualized, against 14.6% in 2007, and he expected the percentage to grow to almost 21% in 2010.

“More importantly, last year, and for the first time ever, the number of virtual machine (VM) shipments exceeded the number of physical servers shipped, topping 2 million units.”

Nebuloni says the drop in hardware spending will lead to a break point in 2009, as VM shipments will be more than 10% higher than physical server shipments.

“In 2013, the ratio between virtual and physical server shipments will be 3:2. In parallel, the number of logical machines (physical and virtual) shipped is expected to grow strongly,” says Nebuloni, and he projected shipments would increase by 15.7% through 2013.

“This makes management tools more and more pivotal, as both physical and virtual  servers have to be operated, monitored, and patched.”

And, Nebuloni’s IDC colleague, Nathaniel Martinez, says he believes the current economic crisis to be increasingly intertwined with virtualization adoption, “as the combined need to squeeze costs with the existing assets and the weak demand for new hardware are accelerating its technological impact within customer installed bases.”

“The disruption is becoming visible on the supply side as well, as server design shifts toward virtualization-friendly architectures in specific segments and new players enter the marketplace, attracted by the revenue potential linked with a fully virtualized x86 server stack.

“We see hardware vendors realigning their global strategy in order to be able to generate revenue in alternative ways once virtualization will start impacting server refreshment volumes.”

Nebuloni also said that, “along with the well-known benefits, virtualization presents potential challenges to IT administrators. Being so quick and straightforward, the deployment of virtual machines can generate sprawling environments, where IT managers lose visibility on the amount of VMs and on their actual utilization.

According to Nebuloni, the set up of operative procedures for virtualized environments requires an integration within the existing legacy infrastructure, “which most of the times comprises midrange and mainframe pools. Also, in many cases new practices will have to be put in place, responding to the increasing overlap in the internal areas of responsibility of the IT staff, as storage, server, and network administrators will need to cooperate more closely to tackle interconnected issues.”

Reply

Copyright © 2010 Lots of Articles. All Rights Reserved.
Theme by Lorelei Web Design.