Upload
sherilyn-farmer
View
214
Download
2
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
© 2008 IBM Corporation
IBM’s Vision For The New Enterprise Data Center
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Agenda
What got us here and where are we going?
Over 4 Decades of Virtualization – Layers of Value!
The IBM Systems Virtualization Approach
– Comprehensive Cross Brand Strategy
– It’s in the Management
2
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation3
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation4
Evolving Infrastructure and Management to Support SOA
Infrastructure in Support of
SOA
As Is To Be
Siloed
Static
Physical
Flexible
Dynamic
Virtualized
Services(Application & Information)
Operational Systems(Application & Information Assets)
People(Service consumers)
Business Process
Connectivity (Enterprise Service Bus)
WebDevice
Data Registry
Application Application
Content
Collaboration
External
Services(Application & Information)
Operational Systems(Application & Information Assets)
People(Service consumers)
Business Process
Connectivity (Enterprise Service Bus)
WebDevice
Data Registry
Application Application
Content
Collaboration
External
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation5
SOA and SOI Next To Each Other
This is SOI & Cloud(Focus on Dynamic/Resilient
Infrastructure)
You can have each without the other, but they are better together!
This is SOAFocus on Efficiency in Application
Development and Reuse tied to Business Process
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation6
Together, SOA and SOI (Cloud) Result in Truly Dynamic IT
Applications are:
Reused as appropriate
Decoupled
Easily composed
Conform to standards for interoperability
SOA Framework
SOI/Cloud Framework
The Cloud Infrastructure is:
Completely Virtualized
Continuously Optimized
Dynamically Responsive
Heterogeneous to Support Differing Workloads
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation7
Efficient, Green and Optimized Infrastructure
and Facilities
Security and Business Resilience
Business-Driven Service Management
Highly Virtualized Resources
Information Infrastructure
Enabling The New Enterprise Data Center
– a holistic, integrated approach
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Agenda
What got us here and where are we going?
Over 4 Decades of Virtualization – Layers of Value!
The IBM Systems Virtualization Approach
– Comprehensive Cross Brand Strategy
– It’s in the Management
8
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation9
IBM Hypervisor History
1967 CP-67, CMS – Timesharing
1972 VM/370
1987 PR/SM, EMIF, MHPG
1985 Start Interpretive Execution (SIE) instruction
POWER LPAR Design Begins 1997
AS/400 LPAR 1999
POWER4: iSeries sub-processor LPAR, pSeries LPAR
POWER5: pSeries Micro-Partitioning, Virtual I/O Server
1973 S/370 Model 158 and Model 168 – VM Assists
1990 ES/9000
2001
2004
IBM has long been the leader in hypervisor technology innovation.
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation10
Virtualization & Evolution of Data Centers
Service Oriented Data Center,Ensembles, & Cloud Services
• Comprehensive virtualization• Integrated QoS management ofavailability, security, perf., …
• Hierarchical complexity hiding• Self-service to resources & apps• Request driven provisioning• Automated app. on-boarding • Appliances and SaaS support• Cloud computing service model
Top IT Requirements:• Lower total costs • Rapid application deployment, including self-service
• High availability, security, energy efficiency, utilization
• Service oriented infrastructure
Abstractionand Pooling
Multi-System Virtualization
Virtual Servers, Storage, Networks
Storage
Servers
Networks
V
V
V
Scale-OutSprawl
Windows Servers
Linux Servers
Unix Servers
ManagementServers
Switches
Storage
Firewalls,Routers
PhysicalConsolidation
WindowsServer
Linux Server
Mainframe orUnix Server
Networks
Storage
V
VV
V
V
IT Simplification
Ensemble
Ensemble
Ensemble
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation11
What is virtualization?The essence – idealized – with all the nasty physical bits eliminated.
Architected interface
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation12
Sharing / Partitioning (Consolidation)
VirtualResources
PhysicalResources
Examples: LPARs, VMs, virtual disks, VLANsBenefits: Resource utilization, power, cooling, workload manaageability,
Aggregation
VirtualResources
PhysicalResources
Examples: Virtual disks, IP routing to clonesBenefits: Management simplification,
investment protection, scalability
Emulation
VirtualResources
PhysicalResources
Examples: Arch. emulators, iSCSI, virtual tapeBenefits: Compatibility, investment protection,
interoperability, flexibility
Insulation
Add orReplace
VirtualResources
PhysicalResources
Examples: Spare CPU subst., CUoD, SAN-VCBenefits: Continuous availability, flexibility,
investment protection
Virtualization Functions and Benefits
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation13
Application
Operating System
ResourceDefinition
Application
Operating System
ResourceDefinition
Application
Operating System
ResourceDefinition
Virtualization and “Freeze-Dried” Software
ImageLibrary
Virtualization
Compute StorageMemory Network
Application
Operating System
Image
Virtual Server Virtual Server Virtual Server Virtual Server
Application
Operating System
Image
Application
Operating System
Image
DeployCapture
Update
Clone
Customers manage system images (OS & applications), not virtualization
Easily activate image instances by carving out resources and deploying
Active images get the resources they need when they need it
– Using Workload Manager
Active images continue to run, even when hardware fails or needs upgrade
– Using CAM (Cont. Avail. Manager)
Inactive images can be updated independent of it’s active instances
– Using Update Manager
Application
Operating System
Image
ResourceDefinition Resource Definition
Application
OperatingSystem
Image
Application
OperatingSystem
Image
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
OVF (Open Virtual machine Format) Background
14
Open Virtual Machine Format Specification, was prepared by the DMTF System Virtualization, Partitioning, and Clustering work group.
Value Proposition:
•Improve user experience with streamlined installations
•Offers customers virtualization platform independence and flexibility
•Creates complex pre-configured multi-tiered services more easily
•Efficiently delivers enterprise software through portable virtual machines
•Offers platform-specific enhancements and easier adoption of advances in virtualization through extensibility
•Facilitate interoperability between virtualization platforms (a.k.a. hypervisors)“The Open Virtual Machine Format (OVF) describes an open, secure,
portable, efficient and extensible format for the packaging and distribution of (collections of) virtual machines.”
IBM VMware Inc Dell
Microsoft
Symantec
Hewlett-Packard Company
Hitachi, Ltd.
Sun Microsystems, Inc XenSource Inc Intel Corporation
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Agenda
What got us here and where are we going?
Over 4 Decades of Virtualization – Layers of Value!
The IBM Systems Virtualization Approach
– Comprehensive Cross Brand Strategy
– It’s in the Management
15
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation16
Technology advancements that can foster innovation – IBM Systems deliver innovation at every level
IBM z/Architecture®Power
Architecture™Cell Broadband
Engine™(1) X-Architecture®
Service-Oriented Architecture
Self-managing Autonomic Technologies
Information Lifecycle Management
System i System z System pBladeCenter
System Storage
Research & Development
IBM Systems
IBM Virtualization Solutions
IBM Systems Director
IBM Cool Blue™ Portfolio
Capacity on DemandManagement technology and infrastructures
POWER.org
Linux
Blades.org
System x
®
(1) Cell Broadband Engine is a trademark of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation17
VA
LUE
MANAGEMENTIBM Systems Director
Physical and virtual platformsFoundation
SERVICE VIRTUALIZATIONFile
VirtualizationProvisioning Scheduling Data Federation GRID
RESOURCE VIRTUALIZATION
Clients Servers Network Storage
Deployment Health
Configuration Maintain
Extension Groups
VirtualizationOptimizatio
nAdvanced Monitoring
IBM Virtualization Platform
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Unified storage and security management software
Comprehensive disk, tape and storage networking hardware
Integrated business solutions
Deep expertise and proven best practices
Flexible financing
Breadth of Capability From a Single, Proven VendorThe IBM Information Infrastructure Includes…
ManageVisibility, Control, Automation
VirtualizeAvailability, Simplification
ProtectSecurity, Compliance, Recoverability
Best Practices and Services
ArchiveActive, Inactive (long term)
IBM Information Infrastructure
Inte
gra
ted
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Information Retention
Information Availability
Reduce reputation risks and audit deficiencies
Support your information retention policies
Deliver continuous and reliable access to information
Information Compliance
Key Capabilities for Successfully Managing InformationAn Information Infrastructure Must Address…
Protect and enable secure sharing of information
Information Security
37% of data is expired or inactive 83% surveyed keep some data 50 years or more
Average US legal discovery request can cost organizations from $150k to $250k.
84% of security breaches come from internal sources.
Downtime costs can amount up to 16% of revenue in some industries.
Sources: CIO Magazine survey 2007; IBM Tivoli Market needs and profiling study 2005; The Costs of Enterprise Downtime: NA Vertical Markets 2005" Information Research; IBM Market Intelligence. SNIA Data Management Forum, 100 Year Archive Requirements Survey, © Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA), 2007
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation20
New Role of Virtualization: IT Management Simplification
Management and Server Spending Outlook
20
40
60
80100
120
140
160
‘96 ’98 ‘00 ’02 ’04 ’06 ’08
Source: IDC, 2004
Spending($B)
15%
7%
8%
11%
12%13%
15%
19%
Initial systemand softwaredeployment
Planning for upgrades, expansion, and
capacity
Upgrades, patches, etc.
Systemmonitoring
Systemmaintenance
Other
15%
7%
8%
11%
12%13%
15%
19%
Components ofManagement Spending
IDC Survey, 2002-2004
Maintenanceand tuning
Migration
• Historical role: reduce server hardware costs by increasing hardware utilization
• Introduces complexity that limits its use
ManagementCost
• Future: A large role in reducing managementcosts, particularly for scale out configurations
• This is an area where we will focus
ServerCost
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation21
Resources
Platforms OS
Switches Routers Load Balancers
Disks SAN NAS
J2EE .NET
Portal ERP Custom
SERVER
VirtualizedInterfaces
NETWORK
VirtualizedInterfaces
STORAGE
VirtualizedInterfaces
MIDDLEWARE
VirtualizedInterfaces
APPLICATION
VirtualizedInterfaces
Management Processes
CCMDB
DataCenterModel
Resources App Topology Relationships
MonitoringMetrics
AnalysisPolicy
Correlation
PlanningPolicy
SchedulingArbitration
Optimization
ExecutionWorkflows
Resource Pools Discovery Policies
Logical Diagram of the Dynamic Resilient Infrastructure
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation
Agenda
What got us here and where are we going?
Over 4 Decades of Virtualization – Layers of Value!
The IBM Systems Virtualization Approach
– Comprehensive Cross Brand Strategy
– It’s in the Management
22
IBM Federal
© 2008 IBM Corporation23
THANK YOU!