Virtualized Disaster Recovery: Obvious Benefits, Hidden Obstacles
Introduction
Virtualization has been widely used to speed application deployment, improve IT utilization rates, and reduce costs. Today’s “doing more with less” virtualized data centers require a closer management eye since problems on dense consolidated infrastructure impact more people – employees, partners and customers – then in more distributed, less utilized, and less stressed systems.
Just like their non-virtualized counterparts, virtualized infrastructures require a plan for when a business disruption or disaster strikes. Also like their non-virtualized counterparts, local redundancy while enhanced due to virtualization-enabled high availability and pooling of resources, only goes so far. It can never be a substitute for a second geographically segregated disaster recovery site. While the same disaster recovery tenets apply, the relative newness and consolidated nature of virtualized machines make individual components more critical and thus mandate a more deliberate and comprehensive approach using unique technology components to ensure a successful outcome.
The following is an executive level overview of Virtual Disaster Recovery (VDR) benefits and planning considerations
Virtual Disaster Recovery – BenefitsThe benefits of VDR are very apparent for those who have virtualized their production environments. Besides reaping the same cost and flexibility attributes that virtualization brought to the production environment, a second remote DR location tuned for virtualization can greatly benefit from the enhanced reliability and speed with which virtualized applications can be recovered on separate hardware platforms in a different location. This is critically important when time is of the essence - when a production data center becomes unavailable.
Going a little deeper, one of the core capabilities of virtualization is physical hardware abstraction. This enables utilizing different hardware, brands or versions, so long as the x86/x64 chip set is consistent i.e., Dell to HP not AMD to Intel or HPUX to AIX. Virtualization greatly mitigates problems stemming from recovering a physical server on two disparate hardware brands, such as a Dell 2950 on an HP DL380 or even an HP DL380 to a DL580. Virtualization allows companies to mix and match their production and DR assets. Besides eliminating the need to buy two of everything and having to rigorously maintain all the system levels in lock step, organizations now can opportunistically provision their DR locations, even as “hand me downs,” from production or development. Further cost savings can be realized through provisioning with less robust equipment still capable of maintaining production in a limited capacity or for limited time until reinforcements can arrive.
Even further cost savings are possible if the DR site and strategy are architected where many resources are mapped to fewer. This “many to one” ratio, as it is sometimes called, allows companies to get the most out of a lesser number of servers compared to the production site. This may be a reasonable approach for organizations that are unlikely to lose their entire production capability; or if they do, can operate in a degraded performance mode until the production site is available again.
Virtual Disaster Recovery – Organizational Planning Considerations
It is expected that organizations running virtualized production should recover in a like manner - virtual to virtual. But what about organizations that have a mix of both virtualized and traditionally hosted applications? As in most areas, complexity compounds as more methods of recovery are deployed.

