by Flack » Fri May 22, 2015 8:38 am
I could be wrong about this, but I think it's pretty hard to tell remotely if a machine is virtual. Without having actual access to the machine, I don't think there's any reliable way to tell. But yeah, once you log in and start poking around in device manager or look at running services or processes, it's pretty simply to tell.
Like I said, there are things that it doesn't make sense to virtualize. My friend works for a medical software company that uses SQL servers with 96 gigs of RAM each (yes, really). I wouldn't even begin to think about running that virtually. We also once virtualized our vSphere server which turned out to be a bad idea (when the SAN went down we couldn't log in to fix anything... oops). But pretty much anything else... like I said, it's less about it not working and more about them not supporting it if it doesn't work.
I was told specifically from Trend Micro that we couldn't virtualize our OfficeScan antivirus servers. They suggested we buy 11 physical servers, one for each logical region of our network. Instead we stood up 3 VMs (west, central, east) and managed 60,000 clients just fine with it. On the few times we had to call technical support, when they asked if it was running on physical hardware I just lied to them. Never once was the problem the fact that the server was virtual. We ran this setup for 6 years until we migrated to a new antivirus solution.
I could be wrong about this, but I think it's pretty hard to tell [i]remotely[/i] if a machine is virtual. Without having actual access to the machine, I don't think there's any reliable way to tell. But yeah, once you log in and start poking around in device manager or look at running services or processes, it's pretty simply to tell.
Like I said, there are things that it doesn't make sense to virtualize. My friend works for a medical software company that uses SQL servers with 96 gigs of RAM each (yes, really). I wouldn't even begin to think about running that virtually. We also once virtualized our vSphere server which turned out to be a bad idea (when the SAN went down we couldn't log in to fix anything... oops). But pretty much anything else... like I said, it's less about it not working and more about them not supporting it if it doesn't work.
I was told specifically from Trend Micro that we couldn't virtualize our OfficeScan antivirus servers. They suggested we buy 11 physical servers, one for each logical region of our network. Instead we stood up 3 VMs (west, central, east) and managed 60,000 clients just fine with it. On the few times we had to call technical support, when they asked if it was running on physical hardware I just lied to them. Never once was the problem the fact that the server was virtual. We ran this setup for 6 years until we migrated to a new antivirus solution.