suedunnell wrote: Hi Again - I should add my name to comment #1 above and ask that if anyone has questions, they can either post them here or ask me directly:
Sue Dunnell
PowerBuilder Product Manager
978 287 1752
sue.dunnell@sybase.com
Automated web load and stress testing software developer,
Web Performance (WPI), has released its latest investigative research on the
leading virtualization software, VMware ESX Server 3.
Server virtualization is considered one of the most significant changes in IT
operations in the past decade, making it possible to manage groups of servers
with a greater degree of reliability at a lower cost. For some IT operations
managers, however, questions remain about how much overhead virtualization
adds. In addition, how much slower does a single web application run in a
virtualized server compared to a regular, non-virtualized server? The latest
performance report from Web Performance takes a look at a typical PHP-based web
application, and measures the performance both with and without virtualization
in the premier virtualization product VMWare ESX.
Ben Miller, Chief Engineer at BlueLock, a company that provides IT
infrastructure as a service noted, ''The importance of putting real world
benchmark numbers on an infrastructure is often overlooked. Getting real data
that can demonstrate the viability and scalability of an environment and
application is crucial to proper planning for sizing and growth. In an
infrastructure as a Service model meaningful application performance benchmarks
will help a client to plan for their operating costs and predict with accuracy
when they will need to scale on demand.''
The test was set up with two identical software installations, one running
directly on hardware, the traditional server configuration, and another running
inside a virtual machine. Any server-based application would have sufficed; for
the test the open source CRM package SugarCRM was used. The primary measure of
performance used for the test is user capacity, which we define that as the
number of simultaneous users that the system can support while meeting the
specified performance criteria.
The results showed that the number of simultaneous users that could be handled
by the virtualized server was 14% lower than the number of simultaneous users
being handled by the traditional server configuration.
Mr. Miller added, ''This test confirms again that the performance difference
between real vs virtual machines is small enough to be made up for by an extra
core. HP's hardware and VMWare's Enterprise
platform make adding this additional horsepower trivial and in most cases
without downtime. The advantages in flexibility, business continuity, scalability,
manageability, and the many other benefits of virtualization simply cannot be
purchased for a traditional infrastructure at the small price of this
virtualization tax.''
Given the rate at which processor performance is increasing, this performance
difference was neglible compared to the benefits of virtualization, and should
put to rest any qualms about performance issues with virtualized systems.
John Qualls, CEO of BlueLock remarked, ''The test provides us an in depth
understanding of the relationship between performance and the 'virtualization
tax'. It gives us the confidence that something as simple as a $100 processor
upgrade investment can mitigate this 'tax' while allowing our clients to enjoy
efficient hosting and IT recovery thru a 100% virtual environment. This is
important to BlueLock since virtualization is the enabler for us to deliver
Infrastructure as a Service.''
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