Archive for Application Virtualization
New Poll: Who is your VDI choice?
Posted by: | CommentsMicrosoft App-V Will be Delivered by Citrix Receiver and Dazzle
Posted by: | CommentsOnce again, Citrix shows how to successfully play with Microsoft as a partner. They are taking the core functionality of App-V and building on it by delivering it with Citrix Receiver and Dazzle. I think having the applications delivered via Dazzle is a compelling idea.
What is still unclear is if Microsoft is going to make App-V’s licenses to gain a wider install base, but I expect that to happen soon as well.
Turnkey Linux Virtual Appliances – 10 minutes to Mediawiki
Posted by: | CommentsAs most of you know that read my blogs or twitter posts, I work with more than one virtualization vendor’s products. VMware has a huge library of virtual appliances, but it’s a bit of a hassle to convert them to other platforms.
Recently I’ve been working on upgrading our training and demo kits. Part of our upgrade is to have the setups self documented by using a dedicated internal wiki on the kits themselves. I looked at several options including doing a fresh build from scratch.
Eventually, I found Turnkey Linux appliances. I like them because they aren’t already built appliances for one vendor; instead, they are Ubuntu server .iso files with the software already installed and configured. That way you can install on pretty much any virtualization vendor that supports Ubuntu or Debian as a guest OS. Then it’s just a matter of installing the tools.
I installed a Mediawiki appliance on ESX (New Virtual Machine>Ubuntu 32-bit, defaults on CPU and RAM and whatever size disk you want) and here are the post install steps to get the VMware tools installed.
Refresh to the latest repositories.
- apt-get update
Install the missing packages:
- apt-get install gcc
- apt-get install make
- apt-get install linux-headers-2.6.24-23-generic (check your version of the kernel and match it)
Insert virtual CD ROM image by selecting ”install vmware tools” from the VM’s Edit menu.
mount /dev/cdrom /media/cdrom
cp /media/cdrom/VMwareTools-xxxx.xxx…tar.gz /tmp
cd /tmp
tar -zxvf VMwareTools-xxxxx.xxx….tar.gz
cd vmware-tools-distrib/
./vmware-install.pl
Select the defaults, you may have to tell it to use a newer version of gcc on one of the questions.
You should have the VMWare tools installed at this point.
Upgrade the system
- apt-get upgrade
Start wikiing.
Doubletake Product Suite Announcement
Posted by: | CommentsWhenever you are trying to come up with the best solution for physical to virtual (P2V) migrations, there are several things to consider. Depending on your downtime window, you sometimes have to get really creative. When the downtime window is very short, it also shortens the list of suitable methods to accomplish the P2V task. In that mix of options to have in your solution arsenal, Doubletake is a good one. I recently talked with Bob Roudebush from Doubletake about their new product suite.
Replication often happens at the hardware level with SAN mirroring but that can be costly or just not practical, depending on the project requirements. “Figuring out a way to replicate Exchange from one site to another is always a challenge. We do it with real time data replication with software. Because it’s software, some of the biggest benefits are the cost savings and no big costs with hardware.”
I asked about what host systems Doubletake works with currently and what is on their roadmap. “Our software works with virtual machines as well as physical. We’ve figured out with software what a SAN normally does. We have an edition of our product for ESX and one for Hyper-V, and XenServer is on the roadmap. The Linux version allows for block-level replication.”
Doubletake started out with a nice replication offering, but with this recent announcement, they’re seeking to become more. According to Bob, “The Company we’ve become over the years is much different than when we started. We aren’t just a point problem solver. We now have the ability to move data around in real time without the users knowing about it. For the first time, we are unveiling a workload product suite.”
The suite’s key capabilities include:
- Workload Portability (Double-Take Move): Move workloads between any combination of physical and virtual hardware (P2P, P2V, V2P or V2V) within datacenters for hardware refreshes, or across locations for datacenter migrations and consolidations.
- Workload Backup (Double-Take Backup): Continuously backup workloads and recover them on-demand to a new physical or virtual machine. Using CDP capabilities, recovery can also be done at the item level to any point in time.
- Workload Availability (Double-Take Availability): Ensure the availability of critical IT workloads for disaster recovery and business continuity using real-time replication and failover that can protect individual applications, entire servers or virtualized workloads running on VMware ESX or Microsoft Hyper-V.
- Workload Flexibility (Double-Take Flex): Easily manage any workload by booting it from iSCSI SANs, regardless of hardware.
I think Doubletake Flex is an interesting product. Bob said, “The idea is to make it easier to manage a workload to boot from network instead of local disks. Using the standard hardware you can boot to the iSCSI SAN. Blade servers are a good example. You may not have a lot of storage, and you can boot to an iSCSI LUN. We have a central console and assign MAC address to LUNs and it contacts to our management server to see where it needs to boot from and then it boots from the iSCSI SAN. ”
So, whenever you are faced with a ridiculous downtime window for your conversions, make sure to check out Doubletake’s solutions.
I’d like to thank Bob for taking his time to discuss the new Doubletake product suite.
Pano Logic Thin Client Integration With The VMware Virtual Desktop Manager
Posted by: | CommentsINTRODUCTION
This post details results via our comprehensive testing (October-November 2008), which was executed for a Healthcare client’s VDI implementation project. The IT engineers and managers selected the VMware Virtual Desktop Manager as its Desktop Broker. And at project completion, the client should have at least 2,000 Desktops running as virtual machines using 48 ESX Servers (HP Blades). Completing the architecture is Cisco Networking Gear and EMC Celerra Storage, using iSCSI as the transport protocol to provide the underlying infrastructure framework. Per our client’s request we have evaluated the Pano Logic solution and we are sharing the results here.
PANO LOGIC POSITIVE ASPECTS
Pano boasts an ultramodern, innovative design that is appealing to the eye.

Handy Cloud Applications and Web Based Services Make My Migrations Much Easier
Posted by: ssnowden | Comments CommentsI move between computers and OS’s fairly regularly. I’ve started using a few really handy web-based applications to make the moves as painless as possible and without having a long downtime when I choose to install a different Linux distro or Windows 7 as the pre-release versions drip out from Microsoft.
As I’ve added these apps, I’m finding that I can move pretty quickly to a new setup very quickly now. Here are the ones I’ve found so far to be the most handy.
Free:
Office applications, email, calendaring.
Google Mail, Docs, Calendar http://google.com
File storage, free up to 2GB. It’s easy to set up and use.
Dropbox www.dropbox.com
Great note-taking, pasting functions. This is quickly becoming my memory. In fact, I wrote this blog post in Evernote.
Evernote www.evernote.com
Firefox plug-ins:
Xmarks - syncs your bookmarks and passwords
Delicious – I still use Delicious to go across browsers to bookmark links.
Not Free (for full versions):
Google Apps http://google.com/a I really like Google Apps. They do nearly everything I need on a normal basis.
Carbonite www.carbonite.com All my critical files are automatically backed up and updated every day. I don’t even think about it anymore.
I’m sure I’ll add more to this list and some may be replaced eventually since that’s the nature of our business.