ken brumfield | premier field engineer [email protected] ward ralston| group product manager...
TRANSCRIPT
The Road from Windows Server 2003 to Windows Server 2008 R2Ken Brumfield | Premier Field [email protected]
Ward Ralston| Group Product [email protected]
Microsoft Corporation
WSV327
Session Objectives and TakeawaysSession Objective(s):
Be able to Tell the Story of Windows Server Advances from W2K3 to W2K8 R2Understand the Key Server Workloads that drive value
Understand how the industry has shifted.Understand how improvements reduce cost and drive stabilityIdentify new features that the industry is asking forWhat this Session is Not
A technical listing of all of the new features since Windows Sever 2003
Who We AreKen BrumfieldPremier Field Engineer
Ward RalstonGroup Product Manager
Worked at Microsoft 8 years Dedicated to large 500,000 seat Active Directory
Deployment for the last 4 years 4 years Transactional PFE Runs several open source projects for AD support tools Co-Author HP ASE study guide Contributed/edited numerous
documents/whitepapers published through various Microsoft sites
Is the ‘Technical Guy’
At Microsoft 6 years Lead for Windows Server outbound marketing in the
Enterprise Works closely with dev team bringing server to market
and developing new versions Contributed/edited numerous
documents/whitepapers/exams published through various Microsoft sites
Will never do another book/course A+, Networking+, Security+, CCNA, MCP, MCP+I,
MCSA, MCSE (NT,W2k,03/08), MCT, CISSP Is the ‘Marketing Guy’
Objective 1
Tell The Story
Tell the story
Industry Drivers
Reducing TCO
Increasing Business
valueResources
You are Here
“Futures Blitz” Customer Findings
21 23 25 27 29 31 330
50
100
150
200
250
Define, Audit & Enforce Data Policies
Efficiently Deploy Services
Enable Continuous Availability of OS, Applications and Data
Keep Private Data Private and Privacy Choices Transparent
Licensing Makes Business Sense
Enable Seamless Access Across Boundaries
Location Independent Dy-namic Resource Allocation
Help Me Understand My Es-tate
Write and Run Any Applica-tions
Sync Hardware and Software
Continuously optimize power consumption
Allow me to create and deploy in a granular fash-
ion
Customer Priority
Value Satisfaction Gap
Coun
t of R
equi
rem
ents
Sync Hardware and Software
Write and Run Any Applications
Continuously optimize power consumption
Enable Seamless Access Across Boundaries
Licensing Makes Business Sense
Keep Private Data Private and Privacy Choices Transparent
Define, Audit & Enforce Data Policies
Allow me to create and deploy in a granular fashion
Location Independent Dynamic Resource Allocation
Help Me Understand My Estate
Enable Continuous Availability of OS, Applications and Data
Efficiently Deploy Services
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Normalized Priority
“Futures Blitz” Customer Findings
Help Me Understand My EstateSelected Customer Requirement Statements
“Centrally monitor, audit and report on all aspects of my network including network usage, health, and resource utilization in real-time”
“Easily manage and report on anything in my enterprise from a single console”
“Ability to assign certain admin rights to specific users, and enable key stroke capturing to track what admins are doing on a server”
“Easily manage desktop OS and applications from a central point”
“The ability of the OS to detect and report on critical issues and have it proactively begin the support process”
“Monitor and analyze system performance from a single dashboard, quickly identify problems or misbehaving applications, and assist with troubleshooting”
Enable Continuous AvailabilitySelected Customer Requirement Statements
“Disaster "survivability" with cross location survival”
“Quickly deploy OS, patches, and services without any impact to service availability”
“Automatically restore services and provide business continuity without data loss in seconds”
“Enable fast recovery from disaster especially enabling easy restoration of large data volumes”
“Backup efficiently and centrally with a smaller footprint at a central location, backing up all services and resources; intelligent backup based on a changed delta threshold”
Directory ServicesSelected Customer Requirement Statements
Federation
“Use credentials from any source (business partner, cloud, other forest) for seamless access to any resources or applications, with minimal administrative overhead”
“Use external identities to grant access to my resources and use my identities to gain access to external resources, while exposing the minimum amount of data needed.”
Auditing/Reporting/Compliance
“Standardized infrastructure and tools for AD standards enforcements and usage reporting”
“Easily and securely delegate access to anything in my forest”
Directory ServicesSelected Customer Requirement Statements
Virtualization
“Easily deploy and operate DS in a virtualized environment while supporting all common virtualization technologies like snapshots and migration, without any risk to DS stability”
Health
“Quickly and easily detect and report on the health of my AD and LDS infrastructure”
“Quickly determine root cause of problems in my environment and identify steps to resolution”
“Report on the overall health of the end-to-end service, not just the individual box”
Directory ServicesSelected Customer Requirement Statements
Management
“Lower the cost of maintaining the AD service, patch/reboot as little as possible and have no user or application impact when you do.”
“Easily script account management including attributes of other Microsoft and 3rd-party products (i.e. Exchange)”
Backup/Restore
“Easily recover from forest/domain failure or data loss at an object and attribute level.”
Virtual Directory
“Present multiple views of objects in the directory”
We Continue Developing Future Value
• Everything is a server• Everything is
virtualized• No more local servers• Utility computing• Cloud OS• Global ID• Turning green?
Speculative
• Fungible servers• Mix of on & off premise
infrastructure• Ubiquitous computing• Persistant sessions• Network de-
perimiterization• Physical is unusual vs.
virtualized• Massive Parallelism• Network latency close
to on system• Being green
Nascent
• Massive cheap HDDs• Smaller Solid State
Disks• Cloud-based storage• Virtualization is
mainstream• Pervasive wireless• Plethora of devices• Many-core• Software as a Service• Redundant data centers• Going green• Consolidated data
center fabric
Emerging
• Regulatory compliance• Standards• Operational efficiency• Mobile workforce• In-house IT• Out-sourcing• Off-shoring• Privacy• Legacy systems• Exponential data growth• Consolidation• Multi-core• Thinking green
Now
Tell the story
Industry Drivers
Reducing TCO
Increasing Business
valueResources
Objective 2
You are Here
Industry Shifts
VirtualizationMulti
Many-core
64-Bit Power
4 GB 2 TB
64-Bit Technology Ready for Prime Time
= 256 Cores
b
Defense in Depth Strategy
IPSec MachineHygiene
BehaviorBlockingWindows
Client Protector Antivirus Anti-Spyware
Defeated at machine edge
Recognizedattack
No vulnerabilityto exploit
Malicious behavior of unknown threat prevented
Known threatdetected and
neutralized
ProtectedHosts
AttackerMalware
HostFirewall
Advanced updating
NAPSecure
Net
Premier Generated CHIP Report
Customer Health Improvement Program Review
Microsoft Support Lifecycle Policyhttp://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/
Mainstream Support:Incident Support (no-charge incident support, paid incident support, support charged on an hourly basis)Security update supportThe ability to request non-security hotfixes
Microsoft will offer a minimum of 10 years support (5 years of Mainstream support and 5 years of Extended) for Business and Developer products.
Microsoft will offer a minimum of 3 years of Mainstream support for products that are released annually, for example, Money, Encarta, Picture It!, and Streets & Trips.
Microsoft will offer a minimum of 5 years of Mainstream support for Consumer, Hardware, Multimedia products, and the Microsoft Business Solutions products.
Extended Support:• All paid incident support options• Security update support at no additional cost• Non-security related hotfix support requires a separate Extended Hot Fix
Support contract to be purchased. Per-fix fees also apply • Microsoft will not accept requests for design changes, or new features
during the Extended support phase
Tell the story Industry Drivers Reducing TCO Increasing Business value Resources
Objective 3
You are Here
Feature Requests That Contribute to Reduced TCOEfficiently Deploy ServicesUnderstand My EstateAllow create/deploy in a granular fashionContinuously optimize power consumption
Server TCO Breakdown
Staffing costs: management &
maintenance60%
Downtime: user productivity
15%
IT staff training8%
Server hardware7%
Software costs7%
Outsourced costs3%
Source: IDC, 2007. Three Year Server TCOwww.microsoft.com/getthefacts
Server Infrastructure CostsPatch Management63% of surveyed companies identified this as one of their biggest management challengesResource Utilization60% of surveyed companies identified this as one of their biggest management challengesMaintenance Costs44% of surveyed companies identified this as one of their biggest management challengesServer Sprawl42% of surveyed companies identified this as one of their biggest management challenges
Studies have also found that server utilization is at an all-time low of 8% average and trending down
Core IO Levels of Maturity
Dynamic
• Proactive• Optimizing
Costs and Quality
• Agile• Self Assessing
and ContinuousImprovement
• “Taking The Lead”
• Knowledge Capture and Use Automated
• Proactive• Accountable• Increased
Monitoring• Formal Change
Management• SLA’s• Improvement• Predictability• “Quality
Driven”• Knowledge
Captured and Reused
Standardized
• Reactive • Stable IT• Request Driven• Change
Management and Planning
• “Keeping ItRunning”
• Knowledge Capture
Basic
• Reactive• Ad hoc• Problem-
Driven• “Avoiding
Downtime”• Knowledge Not
Captured
Rationalized
Significant Cost Saving Opportunity for Server Management Automation
Data derived from Microsoft “Spotlight on Cost” Server Study 2009
Opportunity to use same tools and practices from desktop management in server environment
Automated Server Deployment
Automated Patch
Automated Back and restore
Average automation practice adoption is only 30%
Automation | Optimization | Simplification
Research shows opportunity to save an average of $2160 per server per year
Automated server management not widely adopted
Windows 2008 and 2008 R2 Knowledge Capture/UseIncludes Best Practice Analyzers (BPA) for every role
Majority of costs for production outages comes from administration. Either configuration errors or “point and click”/”typo” mistakesBPAs include checks for configuration states that are known to cause issues.
Windows Troubleshooting PlatformProvides ISVs, OEMs, and administrators the ability to write troubleshooting packs that are used to discover and resolve issues found on the computerWindows 7 and 2008 R2 only
Fix It CenterFix It Center scans your device to diagnose and repair problems, then gives you the option to "Find and fix" or to "Find and report”Automates tracking of fixes/changes implementedWindows Client Only
Core IOIdentity and Access ManagementDesktop, Device, and Server ManagementSecurity and NetworkingData Protection and RecoverySecurity ProcessITIL/COBIT-Based Management Process
Capability: Desktop, Device and Server ManagementMoving from Basic to Standardized
Standard ImagesWindows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK)Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT)
Automated Patch Distribution (Desktop/Laptop)Windows Server Update Services (WSUS)System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM)
Software Update ManagementSoftware Distribution
Identity Validation, Data Protection, and Data Backup of Mobile DevicesBitlocker and Bitlocker-To-Go
Capability: Desktop, Device and Server Management Moving from Standardized to Rational
Automated Patch Distribution (Servers)Automated OS Distribution
Windows Deployment Services (WDS)System Center Configuration Manager
Operating System Deployment FeatureSystem Center Virtual Machine Manager
Automated Tracking of Hardware and SoftwareSystem Center Configuration Manager
Asset IntelligenceHardware InventorySoftware Metering
Microsoft Assessment and Planning (MAP) ToolkitServer Consolidation and Virtualization
Hyper-V
Capability: Desktop, Device and Server Management Moving from Rational to Dynamic
Automated Infrastructure Capacity PlanningSystem Center Capacity Planner
Virtualization to Dynamically Move Workloads from Server to ServerSystem Center Virtual Machine Manager – Performance and Resource Optimization (PRO)
Comparison of Basic and Standardized Email environment costs
Standardized Example
20,000 Users
1.62 ITE for Workload
15 Servers
9.29 Servers per ITE
7 Best Practices
$11,872 Cost per Server
$8.90 Cost per User
Basic Example
4,500 Users
1.3 ITE for Workload
4 Servers
2.89 Servers per ITE
3 Best Practices
$38,160 Cost per Server
$33.92 Cost per User
Some Differentiating Best PracticesStandardized software imaging for new deployments
Standardized imaging for operating-system maintenancePlanned operating-system maintenance
Collaboration Server IO Workload
Best Practices to Reduce Operational CostsEmail Workload
Adoption of Best Practice
Red
ucti
on
in
IT L
ab
or
Cost
per
Serv
er
Standardized Practices
Rationalized/Dynamic Practices
Continuously Optimize Power Consumption“No more than 10% of all enterprise PCs in use have their power management capabilities turned on today”U.S. Environmental Protection Agency EstimatesImprovements in Out-Of-The-Box Power ConsumptionSystem Center Operations Manager (SCOM) 2007 R2 – Windows Power Management PackEnables you to monitor and manage the power consumption of computers running Windows Server 2008 R2System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R3 (in Beta)Allows for basic power management at the enterprise level
Power Savings & Enhancements
.
10-15% Power Savings over Windows Server 2003
~63W Xeon 55xx Series
Power
Tell the story Industry Drivers Reducing TCO Increasing Business value Resources
Objective 4
You are Here
Feature Requests That Contribute to Increased ValueContinuous AvailabilityEnable Seamless Access Across BoundariesWrite and Run Any Application
Continuous Availability
Clustering ImprovementsMulti-Site ClustersCluster shared volumes – multi-tenancy VHD disk accessLive Migration for Hyper-VNow can cluster DFS Replication TargetsCluster RDP Connection Session BrokerImproved existing and added new validations and migration options
Seamless Access Across Boundaries
Enabling a remote workforceClient Connectivity
DirectAccessBranch CacheImprovements in client side Offline Files
Desktop VirtualizationVirtualized Desktop Initiative (VDI)
Session VirtualizationTerminal Services Remote Desktop Services
Identity ManagementActive Directory Federated Services (ADFS)
Write and Run Any ApplicationApplication Virtualization
Med-V – Run applications on older versions of Windows platformWindows 2000 SP4Windows XP SP3
App-V – Run conflicting versions of an applicationAppFabric – Write the application once, run it on a server in the data center and move to cloud.
Tell the story Industry Drivers Reducing TCO Increasing Business value Resources
Objective 4
You are Here
Track Resources
Best Practices to Reduce IT Operational Costs - Server Infrastructure Optimization (IDC) http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/B/9/EB962D65-2EE9-4B9A-A16F-71BABA50541C/CoreIOCostBestPracticesServer.pdfMicrosoft and Intel: Innovations in Hardware and Software to Help Deliver New Technology Experienceshttp://intel.com/go/idfsessionsHow Windows Server Reduces TCOhttp://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver/compare/linux/windows-server-tco.mspxInfrastructure Optimizationhttp://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb496510.aspxDelivering Business Value by Optimizing your IT Investmentshttp://www.microsoft.com/optimization/default.mspx
Resources
www.microsoft.com/teched
Sessions On-Demand & Community Microsoft Certification & Training Resources
Resources for IT Professionals Resources for Developers
www.microsoft.com/learning
http://microsoft.com/technet http://microsoft.com/msdn
Learning
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© 2010 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.
JUNE 7-10, 2010 | NEW ORLEANS, LA