Credit Suisse shows virtualization is the way forward
http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/09/24/39FE-virt-case-credit-suisse_1.html
With 20,000 servers to manage, financial services powerhouse Credit Suisse had a long list of reasons to consider server virtualization: reducing the number of physical servers to manage, cutting power needs, improving software provisioning time, and deferring expensive datacenter buildouts. But it also needed a clear set of guidelines to determine when to virtualize, plus a clear set of procedures for managing a virtualization initiative.
Credit Suisse began by eliminating servers as candidates for virtualization. For example, the company had already created server efficiencies by sharing instances of Web servers on one box and sharing databases on another box — both time-honored, proven techniques, notes Stephen Hilton, managing director for enterprise server and storage. “Putting a hypervisor there doesn’t necessarily help you,” he says, because Credit Suisse had already raised utilization rates and reduced hardware needs for those applications.
Other sets of servers just didn’t make sense for virtualization, Hilton says, including I/O-intensive servers, servers with specialized add-on hardware, and servers whose transactional applications had very tight processing windows, where the overhead of virtualization added milliseconds that would cause timing problems.
That still left a large pool of virtualization candidates — about 10,000 servers, in fact, most running either Windows or Solaris. In general, their utilization was low, particularly those used in development and test environments where, in both cases, the boxes tended to have more horsepower than needed. That low utilization is apparent in Hilton’s expectations of how many VMs he will get per physical server: at least a 20:1 ratio for servers in the development environment; 15:1 to 10:1 for the test and disaster recovery environment; and 5:1 in the production application environment. Hilton’s team is now in the process of virtualizing these servers, with plans to be done with 5,000 by early 2009.
The group has already virtualized 1,000.
Check out this great article illustrating how Credit Suisse has used virtualization as a tool for consolidating the server infrastructure, it also discusses how they went about it etc.


