Virtualization News Desk
Embotics Identifies High Costs Associated with Virtual Sprawl
Embotics Whitepaper Describes the Costs Associated with Virtual Sprawl and Suggestions on Estimating the Cost of Sprawl
May. 14, 2008 03:15 PM
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Embotics introduced a whitepaper describing the costs
associated with virtual sprawl and suggestions on estimating the cost of sprawl
in an enterprise environment. The study also examines the importance of
preventing sprawl to reduce costs, and is available for download at: <http://www.embotics.com/whitepapers/>
The nature of virtualization frequently leads to the
misconception that virtual machines (VMs) have no real associated costs,
despite the high costs associated with infrastructure, management, software and
administration. The truth is that VMs have real costs similar to physical
servers; and these costs increase with virtual sprawl. The costs of virtual
sprawl take up budget, time and eventually require the purchase of more
physical servers than needed. This can frequently negate the company’s return
on investment which is the greatest benefit of virtualization.
“Virtual sprawl not only impacts management, administration
and overall security in a data center, it also has a direct link to the bottom
line,” said Todd Monahan, data center manager for Alcatel-Lucent. “Increased
use of resources, software licenses and administration can, if not managed
correctly, consume all of the savings originally created by server
consolidation.”
Based on an informal customer survey, a typical virtualized
environment can expect to have 30 percent of their VM population unused, and a
virtualized environment of 150 VMs will have anywhere from $50,000 to $150,000
locked up in redundant VMs. Reducing sprawl can have a real impact on the
bottom line, as well as reducing risk. By preventing sprawl, IT administrators
are able to maintain control and contain costs, leaving more budget available
for other necessary IT spending.
“Most IT planners agree that each time a VM is created,
cloned or copied, a cost is incurred,” said Anthony Mar, product marketing
manager of Embotics and author of the “Estimating the real cost of sprawl”
whitepaper. “The more an IT manager understands these associated costs, the
better they are able to optimize their environment. Virtual sprawl is not about
the number of VMs deployed, it is about the structure and control of the
virtual environment.”
For more information
on Embotics contact Katie Sullivan, katie.sullivan@metiscomm.com at Metis Communications.
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