Virtualise Microsoft Exchange: Can you really?

As Microsoft Exchange server is one of my area’s of expertise (or so they keep telling me :) )  I have had numerous discussions in the past whether you should virtualize Exchange or not. For ages Microsoft has claimed it cannot be done, performance would suffer severely, you would not receive support in a virtual environment etcetera.

To be honest, I didn’t really care about it. We’ve designed perfectly working Exchange organizations on VMware when MS was still refusing support. There are some rules you need to respect when you design your messaging environment, but generally it is no problem if you have the required resources available!

Now, a colleague of mine (Thanks Ruben!) pointed me at a specific page within the Microsoft Technet network which has recently been updated. And guess what, suddenly all roles in Exchange 2007 except the UM role are supported on a virtual platform. Now, they do speak of Hyper-V on this page only, but if you follow the link to “Validated Third Party Hypervisor“, you’ll see almost all VMware products are validated for Windows 2008 (and Exchange).

Now, what are the key things to look at when you design a virtual messaging infrastructure? Well, I always use the following list:

  1. How many users do I need to host tops? (try to anticipate on coming changes i.e. takeovers or resignations etc)
  2. How does the average user use the collaboration environment? (device them into 3 groups: light, medium, heavy)
  3. Do I have mobile users?
  4. Do I need clustering/High Availability within Exchange?
  5. How much storage will I need within approximately 2-3 years?
  6. And after all of the above questions are answered, how many IOPS does this environment require to perform within parameters?

Now, I will not give it all away (I have to keep my job too, you know ;) ) but there are some tips I’d like to give you all out there.

If you design carefully, Exchange can be extremely flexible (more flexible then it ever was) on your virtual environment, IF you keep the above facts and tips in mind. There still are other things to keep an eye out for, too. Mailbox and database recovery, for example, put a different load on your storage than normal usage does (the pagesize is much different). Also, the new version of Exchange, Exchange 2010, makes it even more appealing to virtualise. Remember that with a simple and straight forward design, you will benefit in the future. Unneeded complex designs might be a bigger challenge, but are hard to govern and maintain and will always hunt you in the end.

The bottomline and conclusion of this piece is: Virtualise Microsoft Exchange: Can you really? Yes you can! And if you ask me: yes, you should, too! :)

I hope this piece helps when you put Exchange on your VMware farm Virtual Infrastructure. Let me know if it does or doesn’t. I appreciate any comments :)

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