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- Joined
- 19 Jun 2003
- Posts
- 1,680
- Location
- West Yorks, UK
Hi,
I have a customer that is running a (physical) SBS 2003 Server, providing Active Directory, Exchange, File and Print etc for about 25 users. The server is a Dual Core (CoreDuo, not Xeon!) 2GHz with 4GB and 5 x 160GB SATA hard drives in a RAID-5 array, powered by an Adaptec 3805 RAID card.
The customer is wanting to add SQL Server Standard into their network, as well as expand their storage space. One way I considered doing this is as follows:
I'm not expecting stellar performance, as their main requirement is to run at the very least as well as they are on the existing hardware, but gain extra storage and disaster recovery options. They currently have about 300GB of working data, and about 10GB of data in Exchange. The SQL Server database will likely be less than 1GB of data.
The advantages I forsee are:
Matt
I have a customer that is running a (physical) SBS 2003 Server, providing Active Directory, Exchange, File and Print etc for about 25 users. The server is a Dual Core (CoreDuo, not Xeon!) 2GHz with 4GB and 5 x 160GB SATA hard drives in a RAID-5 array, powered by an Adaptec 3805 RAID card.
The customer is wanting to add SQL Server Standard into their network, as well as expand their storage space. One way I considered doing this is as follows:
- Backup the existing Windows shared data, remove it from the SBS 2003 Server
- Convert the existing SBS 2003 to a Virtual Machine
- Once done and tested, install OpenFiler on the old server hardware (probably using software RAID 10) and setup as an iSCSI target as well as providing some CIFS shares
- Restore the Windows shared data into new CIFS shares, ready to be linked up once the SBS 2003 VM is up and running
- Purchase a new Server (Quad core Xeon 2GHz, 6GB RAM, no hard drives) and install ESXi or XenServer onto it (probably onto a USB stick)
- Put the virtual SBS image on the OpenFiler iSCSI server, link it up through ESXi/XenServer
- Alter the login script in SBS 2003 to point the mapped drives at the CIFS shares in OpenFiler
- Create a new Windows Server 2008 + SQL Server 2008 VM
I'm not expecting stellar performance, as their main requirement is to run at the very least as well as they are on the existing hardware, but gain extra storage and disaster recovery options. They currently have about 300GB of working data, and about 10GB of data in Exchange. The SQL Server database will likely be less than 1GB of data.
The advantages I forsee are:
- Increased storage space (as the OpenFiler server could have it's drives replaced with 500GB SATA units, and extra drives are relatively easy to add into the mix)
- Increased backup flexibility - OpenFiler could be set to snapshot the VM's every x hours, their existing LTO-2 tape could be linked up to OpenFiler to allow a daily tape backup
- Possibly increased performance from their existing setup
Matt