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SOA, Virtualization to
Drive Cloud Computing?
May 6, 2008
The
rapid embrace of virtualization has helped change the economics of IT by
not only lowering capital costs but also reducing operational costs. As
customers become more familiar with the technology, virtualization is
increasingly being used to solve more than just server consolidation
challenges. While the next logical step beyond server consolidation is
virtualization for client or desktop consolidation, there are a number
of hurdles that must be overcome for server-hosted virtual desktops (vdi)
to achieve its full potential
IDC believes the next wave of adoption will be centered on mitigating
the problems and costs associated with system downtime. IDC estimates
that server downtime cost organizations roughly $140 billion worldwide
in lost worker productivity and revenue in 2007. Because virtualization
software effectively decouples the application stack from the underlying
hardware, virtual servers can be copied, backed up, replicated, and
moved like a file. Moreover, a growing number of virtualization software
providers have incorporated the ability to do live migrations. These two
capabilities provide a low cost means of quickly reallocating computing
resources without any downtime.
"By directly addressing the need for cost effective business continuity,
virtualization will alter the economics of IT a second time," said John
Humphreys, program vice president in IDC's Enterprise Platform Group.
"More importantly, mobility will be the defining feature that will move
virtualization beyond just a tool for consolidation. The embrace of
mobility will allow customers to use virtualization for business
continuity, capacity planning, and eventually as a solution in
delivering service-oriented computing."
In the capacity planning use case, users will treat multiple hosts as a
single pool of resources and virtual machine loads will be balanced
across the pool based on processor, memory, and I/O utilization levels,
as well as policies set by the user. This will enable IT architects to
plan at the resource pool level with the knowledge that any demand
spikes will be met by a fast and efficient reallocation of the available
server resources.
IDC believes that "policy based automation" could be achieved by
bringing together SOA and virtualization. In this scenario, IT
professionals would be able to shift the delivery of infrastructure and
applications over to management systems that are linked to policies and
service levels set by the business. Although achieving this vision would
require unprecedented collaboration in the industry, if it were
successful, it would be a key step from service-oriented computing to
moving IT into the "cloud." |