How much iron do I need?
Photographers get to call their lenses "glass", so server engineers can get away with calling their servers "iron" :). Quite often on the internal discussion lists, I see questions along the lines of "my customer is going to implement Exchange 2007 in their environment. How many servers do they need?"
The answer, of course, is "It Depends". It depends on the number of users, the number of locations, how heavily the users utilize email, the size of the average attachment, the mail quotas, the number of MAPI users, the number of Outlook Anywhere (formerly RPC/HTTP) users, the number of mobile users, the guaranteed SLA level, etc. There is no substitute for setting up a proof of concept environment that mirrors production, and allowing for future growth.
That having been said, there are two great resources that will allow you to guesstimate your hardware needs.
The first is System Center Capacity Planner. SCCP helps size and plan deployments of Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 (as well as Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services 3.0, Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007, and Microsoft System Center Operations Manager 2007 coming soon). It provides you with the tools and guidance to deploy efficiently, while planning for the future by allowing for "what-if" analyses.
Formerly, SCCP was only available for TechNet Plus and MSDN Premium subscribers. According to the MOM Team blog, it is now freely available for everyone. As of the time I am writing this, the download links off of the SCCP page above do not work, although I was able to snag it from https://connect.microsoft.com/SystemCenter.
The System Center Capacity Planner has the nice "Key Concepts & How-to Videos" originally pioneered in (I believe) System Center Operations Manager). This is perfect for getting up to speed when you are they only Sysadmin in the IT shop.
You have a TON of knobs to tweak when setting up your model. With Exchange, for example, you define your mailbox sites, client-only sites, networks, hardware, usage profiles, client profiles, quotas...
When you are done, you end up with a nice diagram that can be exported to Excel or Visio
You can also run simulations (after changing the proposed hardware, client profile, adding locations, etc) to determine bottlenecks, utilization numbers, etc.
Models are also available for Operations Manager, Remote Operations Manager, and SharePoint/WSS 3.0. The price (free) is right, so download it and check it out!
The other cool resource is a 3rd Party website Sizing Lounge (so I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the numbers) that will help you size SQL, IIS, and Exchange deployments. You do not have nearly as many parameters to set (which will affect the estimates), but the nice thing about this website is that it will break down costs to include the actual cost of the server, as well as the cost of energy and labor over its lifetime. Guess what the largest cost is?
Before I forget, I covered SCCP at the beginning of the year, and linked to some other great resources for sizing Exchange in my post here.
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
PingBack from http://kontraktor.consulting23.info/2007/12/01/how-much-iron-do-i-need/Anonymous
June 10, 2015
Beijing on June 10 morning news, according to Bloomberg survey report GTM Research and the American Solar Energy Industries Association released the first quarter of this year, US home solar power system capacity increase of 76% over last year, to 437 megawatts (MW) ,Solar Batteries http://www.poweroak.net the nation's new generating capacity, more than half of which is a photovoltaic power generation. The report shows that a quarter of the US solar power capacity by 1.3 gigawatts (GW), the sixth consecutive quarterly increase of over 1 GW. The total annual installed capacity is expected to reach 7.9 GW, Solar Power Peneratorhttp://www.poweroak.net , Solar Power Pack http://www.poweroak.net representing an increase of 27%.
The report predicts that by 2016 solar power will meet the electricity needs of about 800 million households in the United States to offset 45 million metric tons of carbon emissions, equivalent to removing 10 million cars. energy storage systemhttp://www.poweroak.net/energy-storage-system-c-1.html