Virtualization News Desk
The Importance of Defragmentation to Virtualization and Green Computing
Defragmentation Can Make a Difference in the Effectiveness of Virtualization and the Amount of Energy Consumed
Mar. 26, 2008 01:30 PM
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For many years, the mantra of the computer industry -- and
computer users -- was "more power!" Faster chips, faster hard drives,
and as much memory as could possibly fit were the priorities. Only secondary
attention -- if that -- was paid to the amount of energy consumed or a
company's carbon footprint. Now with global climate change making itself very
firmly felt, energy conservation has now become vital, and key technologies
such as virtualization have come to the fore. And although you may not realize
it, defragmentation can make a significant difference in the effectiveness of
virtualization and the amount of energy consumed.
Virtualization dovetails right into green computing due to
the fact that it eliminates the use of additional hardware and conserves power
use as well. It allows better use of system resources by allowing multiple
operating environments on a single physical hardware platform. Numerous virtual
machines can operate and appear as independent machines. And file fragmentation
-- already a performance challenge in non-virtual environments -- is even more
of a problem in virtualization.
Virtual machines make use of hard drive partitions which
appear as drives dedicated to the virtual machines. But underneath the
"virtual" software layer, the hardware is storing files the way it
always has, utilizing an entire disk and fragmenting files from all partitions
across the entire disk. Because virtual machines have their own I/O requests that
are passed along to the host system, multiple I/O requests are occurring for
each file request. When fragmentation enters the picture, multiple I/O requests
are occurring for each fragment of each file. For a file fragmented into tens,
hundreds or thousands of pieces, the impact on performance is horrendous.
Because virtualization has its own incredible rate of
fragmentation, virtualization performance is best maximized by a fully
automatic defrag solution such as that offered by Diskeeper. Diskeeper's
proprietary InvisiTasking technology allows defragmentation to occur whenever
idle resources are available -- never negatively impacting performance due to
defragmentation -- which keeps virtualization performance consistently
optimized. No scheduling is ever required.
Automatic defrag also means that overall computer
performance is always faster and more efficient; therefore less power and less
resources are used. Multiplying the effect all across a company and that
company's carbon footprint is substantially reduced.
Another benefit to fully automatic defrag is that computers
need not be left on at night so that scheduled defragmentation can run. Not
long ago, a study found that computers running at night were costing an
estimated 1.72 billion to U.S.
businesses. Fully automatic defragmentation means computers can be shut off at
night, unless needed for other reasons.
For the realization of virtualization and green computing
benefits, automatic defragmentation such as that offered by Diskeeper is a must.
About Virtualization News DeskSYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.