Virtualization has transformed IT. It’s enabling organizations increased flexibility and efficiency, allowing them to reach out towards their customers in new and more effective ways.
Virtualization allows companies to abstract IT resources away from the physical infrastructure allow them to be pooled and controlled by sophisticated software, regardless whether its compute, storage or networking.
Virtualization is a core skill within Advanced Intelligence Technologies (AI Technologies) as such we host a variety of complementary solutions for virtualized environments from security, servers and storage.
Virtualization can increase IT agility, flexibility and scalability while creating significant cost savings. Greater workload mobility, increased performance and availability of resources, automated operations – they’re all benefits of virtualization that make IT simpler to manage and less costly to own and operate.
• Reduced capital and operating costs.
• Minimized or eliminated downtime.
• Increased IT productivity, efficiency, agility and responsiveness.
• Faster provisioning of applications and resources.
• Greater business continuity and disaster recovery.
• Simplified data center management.
• Availability of a true Software-Defined Data Center.
Due to the limitations of x86 servers, many IT organizations must deploy multiple servers, each operating at a fraction of their capacity, to keep pace with today’s high storage and processing demands. The result: huge inefficiencies and excessive operating costs.
Enter virtualization. Virtualization relies on software to simulate hardware functionality and create a virtual computer system. This enables IT organizations to run more than one virtual system – and multiple operating systems and applications – on a single server. The resulting benefits include economies of scale and greater efficiency.
Virtual Machines Explained
A virtual computer system is known as a “virtual machine” (VM): a tightly isolated software container with an operating system and application inside. Each self-contained VM is completely independent. Putting multiple VMs on a single computer enables several operating systems and applications to run on just one physical server, or “host.”
A thin layer of software called a “hypervisor” decouples the virtual machines from the host and dynamically allocates computing resources to each virtual machine as needed.
VMs have the following characteristics, which offer several benefits.
• Run multiple operating systems on one physical machine.
• Divide system resources between virtual machines.
• Provide fault and security isolation at the hardware level.
• Preserve performance with advanced resource controls.
• Save the entire state of a virtual machine to files.
• Move and copy virtual machines as easily as moving and copying files.
• Provision or migrate any virtual machine to any physical server.