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John Kelbley Senior Technical Product Manager 860-678-3107.

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Presentation on theme: "John Kelbley Senior Technical Product Manager 860-678-3107."— Presentation transcript:

1 John Kelbley Senior Technical Product Manager JohnKel@microsoft.com 860-678-3107

2 Agenda  Topics:  Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V  Architecture  Hyper-V in Production  Demo  Hyper-V Networking  Hyper-V Systems and VM Creation  Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008  Microsoft System Center  Virtualization Comparison

3 Introduction John Kelbley johnkel@Microsoft.com johnkel@Microsoft.com  Senior Technical Product Manager with Microsoft’s Platform Tech Strategy Team (Redmond-based group)  Field-based “corporate” resource focused on customer and partner engagement for new server technology  Server Virtualization  High Performance Computing (HPC)

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5 Windows Hyper-V Requirements  Description  Hypervisor based virtualization platform  Windows Server 2008 x64 Edition technology  Standard, Enterprise and Datacenter Editions  Hardware Requirements  x64 server with hardware assisted virtualization  AMD AMD-V or Intel VT  Hardware enabled Data Execution Prevention (DEP) required  AMD (NX no execute bit)  Intel (XD execute disable)  Note: Enabling these BIOS features requires powering down (not rebooting) the server to take effect

6 Hyper-V: Production Scalability  Hyper-V Powering Microsoft Internet Properties Now support for systems with 24 LPs and up to 192 running VMs! TechNet: 100% Hyper-V http://technet.microsoft.com ~1 million hits a DAY Microsoft.com: >50% Hyper-V and growing http://www.microsoft.com ~1 Billion hits a month MSDN: 100% Hyper-V http://msdn.microsoft.com ~3 million hits a DAY

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8 Windows Server 2008 VSP Windows Kernel Hyper-V Architecture Applications Non-Hypervisor Aware OS Windows Server 2003, 2008 Windows Kernel VSC VMBus Emulation “Designed for Windows” Server Hardware Windows hypervisor Xen-Enabled Linux Kernel Linux VSC Hypercall Adapter Parent Partition Child Partitions VM Service WMI Provider VM Worker Processes User Mode Kernel Mode Ring -1 IHV Drivers VMBus Applications

9 Hyper-V  Capabilities  32-bit (x86) & 64-bit (x64) VMs  Large memory support (64 GB) per VM  SMP VMs (up to 4 cores)  Integrated cluster support for HA & Quick Migration  BitLocker: Seamless, secure data encryption  Live Backup: Volume Shadow Service integration  Pass-through disk access for VMs  Virtual Machine snapshots  New hardware sharing architecture (VSP/VSC/VMBus)  Disk, networking, input, video  Robust networking: VLANs and NLB  DMTF standard for WMI management interface  Support for Full or Server Core installations

10 Windows Server Core  Server Core: new minimal installation option  Provides essential server functionality  Command Line Interface only, no GUI Shell  Benefits  Less code results in fewer patches and reduced servicing burden  Low surface area server for targeted roles  More secure and reliable with less management

11 Security  Isolation  No sharing of virtualized devices  Separate VMBus instance per vm to the parent  No sharing of memory  Each has its own address space  VMs cannot communicate with each other, except through traditional networking  Guests can’t perform DMA attacks because they’re never mapped to physical devices  Guests cannot write to the hypervisor  Parent partition cannot write to the hypervisor

12 Hyper-V Manager

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14 Hyper-V Networking  Two physical network adapters at minimum  One for management  One (or more) for VM networking  Dedicated NIC(s) for iSCSI  Connect parent to back- end management network  Only expose guests to internet traffic

15 Hyper-V Network Configurations  Example 1:  Physical Server has 4 network adapters  NIC 1: Assigned to parent partition for management  NICs 2/3/4: Assigned to virtual switches for virtual machine networking  Storage is non-iSCSI such as:  Direct attach  SAS or Fibre Channel

16 Hyper-V Setup & Networking 1

17 Hyper-V Setup & Networking 2

18 Hyper-V Setup & Networking 3

19 Windows Server 2008 Each VM on its own Switch… VM 2 VM 1 “Designed for Windows” Server Hardware Windows hypervisor VM 3 Parent PartitionChild Partitions User Mode Kernel Mode Ring -1 Mgmt NIC 1 VSwitch 1 NIC 2 VSP VSwitch 2 NIC 3 VSwitch 3 NIC 4 Applications VM Service WMI Provider VM Worker Processes Windows Kernel VSC Windows Kernel VSC Linux Kernel VSC VMBus

20 Hyper-V Network Configurations  Example 2:  Server has 4 physical network adapters  NIC 1: Assigned to parent partition for management  NIC 2: Assigned to parent partition for iSCSI  NICs 3/4: Assigned to virtual switches for virtual machine networking

21 Hyper-V Setup, Networking & iSCSI

22 Windows Server 2008 Now with iSCSI… VM 2 VM 1 “Designed for Windows” Server Hardware Windows hypervisor VM 3 Parent PartitionChild Partitions User Mode Kernel Mode Ring -1 Mgmt NIC 1 iSCSI NIC 2 VSP VSwitch 2 NIC 3 VSwitch 3 NIC 4 Applications VM Service WMI Provider VM Worker Processes Windows Kernel VSC Windows Kernel VSC Linux Kernel VSC VMBus

23 Networking: Parent Partition

24 Networking: Virtual Switches

25 VM with Legacy & Synthetic NIC

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27 Inexpensive Dev System  Single Proc Quad Core  2.6 GHz (multi-core)  1 TB Drive  DVD-RW Burner  1 Gb/E NIC  4 GB DDR2  $600  4 GB DDR2 800 MHz  $40 (2 x $20)  2 1 TB SATA disks  $144 (2 x $72)  Total: $784

28 Disk 1, Partition 1: 500 GB Vista SP1x64 RTM Configuration Disk 2, Partition 1: ~600 GB Virtual Machines System Disk 1: Two Partitions Vista SP1 & Windows 2008 Disk 2: Two Partitions VMs & Storage Disk 1, Partition 2: 500 GB Windows Server 2008 x64 Edition Disk 2, Partition 2: ~1400 GB Storage / ISOs

29 Creating Virtual Machines  Steps: 1. Create virtual machine 2. Install guest operating system & latest SP 3. Install integration components 4. Install anti-virus 5. Install management agents 6. SYSPREP 7. Add it to the SCVMM Library  Windows Server 2003  Create vms using 2-way to ensure an MP HAL

30 Don't forget the ICs! Emulated vs. VSC

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32 Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008  Simplified, optimized and free  Provides basic virtualization capabilities  Great stand-alone hypervisor-based virtualization product  Streamlined  Micro-kernelized hypervisor  Easily integrates into existing infrastructure  Active Directory integration  Leverage existing management tools (e.g,: System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008)  Leverage existing support tools & processes  Leverage existing IT Pro skill-set and knowledge

33 What is Microsoft Hyper-V Server? Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 (HVS) Contains Windows hypervisor and other components, including base kernel and driver technologies. Windows hypervisor Windows or Linux Hardware Parent Partition Windows or Linux Microsoft Hyper-V Server Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V (Windows Role) Available as a role in Server Core or full installation of Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V Windows or Linux Hardware Windows or Linux Windows hypervisor Windows Parent Partition

34 Key Features in Hyper-V Server  Microsoft Hyper-V Server is available as a free download: http://www.microsoft.com/hyper-VServer http://www.microsoft.com/hyper-VServer  Memory support: Up to 32GB of physical memory per system  Support for servers with up to 4 physical processors CPUs (sockets)  Guest SMP support Up to 4 virtual processors  Flexible disk format  Fixed/Dynamically Expanding, Differencing, Pass-through  Management Interfaces  WMI for virtualization platform management  Heterogeneous guest support  Native 32/64 bit guest support side by side  Linux and Windows supported with ICs  Virtual Switch, VLAN, PXE support  Hvconfig utility for quick/easy setup

35 HVconfig Automatic startup at login Easy setup utility for server configuration Localized in 11 languages

36 Manage Remotely…

37 “Virtualization without good management is more dangerous than not using virtualization in the first place.” – TOM BITTMAN, GARTNER VP AND ANALYST, 9 MAY, 2007 Virtualization Will Drive Major Change in IT Infrastructure and Operations in the Next Three Years, Tom Bittman, May 8, 2007 Virtualization

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39 What about…  Heterogeneous Virtualization Management  Physical to Virtual Conversion (P2V)  Virtual to Virtual Conversion (V2V)  Virtual Server to Hyper-V  VMware to Hyper-V  Virtual Machine Library  PowerShell Scripting  Delegated Administration  Virtual Machine Authoring  VM Templates/Cloning  Failover Cluster Integration

40 IT Management With System Center Hardware Provisioning Workload Provisioning PatchingMonitoring Disaster Recovery Backup Virtual machine management Server consolidation and resource utilization optimization Conversions: P2V and V2V Patch management and deployment OS and application configuration management Software upgrades Live host level virtual machine backup In guest consistency Rapid recovery End to end service management Server and application health monitoring & management Performance reporting and analysis

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42 Summary Call-to-action  Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008  Free download  Windows Server 2008  Production ready & available now  System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008  Windows Server 2008 R2  Customer driven  Get started today!

43 © 2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.

44 Virtualization Resources  Microsoft Virtualization  Web: http://www.microsoft.com/virtualizationhttp://www.microsoft.com/virtualization  Technet: http://technet.microsoft.com/en- us/virtualization/default.aspxhttp://technet.microsoft.com/en- us/virtualization/default.aspx  System Center Virtual Machine Manager  Web: http://www.microsoft.com/scvmmhttp://www.microsoft.com/scvmm  Hyper-V  http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/us/hyperv.aspx http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/us/hyperv.aspx  Microsoft Application Virtualization (formerly SoftGrid)  Web: http://www.microsoft.com/systemcenter/appv/default.mspxhttp://www.microsoft.com/systemcenter/appv/default.mspx  Terminal Services  Blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/ts/  Web: www.microsoft.com/terminalserverwww.microsoft.com/terminalserver  Virtual PC 2007  Web: http://www.microsoft.com/virtualpchttp://www.microsoft.com/virtualpc

45 Microsoft Virtualization… Microsoft Provides a Multilevel ApproachInfrastructureManagementApplicationsInteroperability Management Unified Physical and Virtual Virtual Machines Virtual Only MigrationQuick Migration WAN Disaster Recovery Live Migration ($$) Local Disaster Recovery ($$) Guest Multi-processing2/4-SMP Large Memory Support64 GB per VM Architecture Supportx86 & x64 Hyper-VVMWare ESX 3.5 Server


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