Next Release of Windows Server codenamed Windows Server 8
TOP FEATURES FOR IT PROS
Interested in Windows Server 8 for IT Pros? Read This Blog !
Benefits
It takes you beyond Virtualization
Windows Server 8 offers a dynamic, multitenant infrastructure that
goes beyond virtualization technology to help deliver a complete platform for
building a Microsoft private cloud. Going beyond virtualization lets you scale
and secure workloads, cost effectively build the cloud, and securely connect to
cloud services. Windows Server 8 will help you provide:
- A complete virtualization
platform that delivers a fully isolated, multitenant environment with
tools that can guarantee service-level agreements, enable chargebacks
through usage-based billing, and support self-service delivery.
- Increased scalability and
performance through a high-density, highly scalable environment that
can be modified to perform at the optimum level based on your needs.
- Connectivity to cloud services using
a common identity and management framework for secure and reliable
cross-premises connectivity.
It delivers the power of many servers, with
the simplicity of one
Windows Server 8 offers you excellent economics by integrating a
highly available and easy-to-manage multiserver platform. Windows Server 8
helps IT professionals cloud-enable their infrastructure while satisfying
business needs faster and more efficiently by providing a highly available,
easy-to-manage multiserver platform with the following benefits:
- Continuous availability: New
and improved features offer cost-effective, high IT service uptime. They
are designed to endure failures without disrupting services to users.
- Management efficiency: Windows
Server 8 helps automate an even broader set of management tasks and
simplifies deployment and virtualization of major workloads, which
provides a path to full lights-out automation.
- Cost efficiency: Windows
Server 8 leverages commodity storage, networking, and server
infrastructure, as well as offering increased power efficiency for
superior acquisition and operating economics.
It opens the door to every app on any cloud
Windows Server 8 is the broadest, most scalable and elastic web
and application platform, giving you the flexibility to build and deploy
applications on-premises, in the cloud, and in a hybrid environment, using a
consistent, open set of tools and frameworks. Windows Server 8 will help you deliver:
- Flexibility to build
on-premises and in the cloud: Developers can use the same languages
and tools to build on-premises and cloud applications, allowing them to
build applications that use distributed and temporally decoupled
components.
- An open web platform: Windows
Server 8 combined with Internet Information Services (IIS) offers a solid
platform for both open-source web stacks and ASP.NET, opening up a wide
range of choices for application development.
- A scalable and elastic web
platform: Hosting providers can use new features in Windows Server 8
to increase density, simplify management, and achieve higher scalability
in a shared web-hosting environment.
It enables the modern workstyle
Windows Server 8 empowers IT to provide users with flexible access
to data and applications, anywhere on any device, while simplifying management
and maintaining security, control, and compliance. Windows Server 8 will help
you offer:
- Access anywhere on any device:
Seamless, always-on access to virtualized work environments from anywhere,
including branch locations and public connectivity services.
- A full Windows experience
anywhere: By enabling a personalized and rich user experience from any
device while adapting to different network conditions quickly and
responsively.
- Enhanced data security and
compliance: Central audit and access policies enable granular access to
data and corporate resources based on strong identity, data
classification, and simplified administration for remote access.
TOP FEATURES FOR IT PROS
While Windows Server 8's
interface negligibly deviates from Server 2008 R2, except for an updated Server
Manager and Active Directory Administrative Center, the capabilities and
features that have been added are far-reaching and affect every facet of the server
OS including, storage, networking, virtualization, performance, and management.
Yet, among all that extended functionality are some killer features that IT
departments should get acquainted with first and foremost.
Although different IT departments
and datacenters have varying needs for certain technologies and tools, there
are several new capabilities in Windows Server 8 that most system
administrators will appreciate. There is so much that is new or tweaked in
Windows Server 8, it is really easy to get lost in the noise of the vast
feature set. Here, I name the most impressive and critical among them. These
are features most IT departments across the board can benefit from, no matter
what their size or industry:
AD Recycle Bin: The Active Directory Recycle Bin is a new GUI
add-on with the Active Directory Administrative Center. With it, admins can
view and restore any deleted AD objects. Objects can be restored to their
original location or to a new container. Although the ability to restored
deleted AD objects is not a new capability, it was done in 2008 R2 with
scripting. Now, admins can quickly get accidently deleted items restored with
the AD Recycle Bin.
Cluster Aware Updating: Another feature implemented due to customer
demand, Cluster Aware Updating (CAU), provides much management relief for
system admins. Previously, when performing Windows updates on clustered
machines, all or some of those machines typically had to be taken offline.
Updating clusters involved much planning and possible scheduled downtime.
Windows Server 8 updating tools now feature cluster-awareness. CAU updates all
nodes in a cluster in an automated way with no downtime of machines in the
cluster.
Claim Definitions: Claim definitions are used in Windows Server 8
for controlling access and auditing information. With this feature, files can
be identified to have sensitive information—for example, documents that contain
the word "confidential" or have social security numbers. Admins can
use Group Policy and Active Directory to setup the users who should or should
not have access to these sensitive files.
Live Migration: Windows Server 8's Hyper-V VM Mobility migrates
virtual machines between hosts within a datacenter or on separate networks.
Migrations happen with no downtime and no disruption of connected clients. Sys
admins can perform migrations without having to implement clustering or
without any shared
infrastructure.
DC replication: Windows Server 8 allows for fast deployment of
Domain Controllers (DC) with virtual DC cloning. You can create replicas of DCs
by cloning an existing one. DC can also be physical or virtual. DC replication
is a great disaster recovery option—you can quickly recover an entire forest. A
new option, "Allow this DC to create a clone," makes a machine
replicable. Admins can also run a PowerShell cmdlet to check if there are any
unrecognized services running on a DC that cannot be cloned.
Flexible Deployment: With Windows Server 2008, admins had the
option to install a full version of the OS, or a more lightweight core version.
Once you chose one install mode, you had to do a complete reinstall to get the
server into another mode. Not so with Windows Server 8. Install modes can
switch from full, to core, to full server without parts of the graphical shell.
You can move back and forth between these modes without having to do a
reinstall of the OS. This is ideal if, for example, the server is in core mode
but you need the full GUI to install a third-party application.
Hyper-V Network Switch: Hyper-V now has a virtual switch that
handles traffic between VMs, the external network, and the host machines. It's
more than that, though. It's extensible, which means extensions and solutions
can (and very likely, will) be created to offer extra Hyper-V functionality,
such as content security and filtering, customized management interfaces,
traffic monitoring, and more.
Intellisense Powershell: Microsoft is advocating sys admins using
PowerShell to manage Windows environments. A few advantages include the ability
to manage remotely, and being able to manage tasks at a very granular
level—more so that with the GUI. Plus, scripting allows admins to perform batch
runs and schedule tasks. The problem is there are sys admins who are unfamiliar
with PowerShell. Microsoft has incorporated Intellisense in PowerShell, which
auto fills-in appropriate command line syntax as admins type, taking a lot of
the guess work out of what appropriate PowerShell syntax should be.
NIC Teaming: This is a much desired feature in datacenters: the
ability to team multiple network adapters to aggregate bandwidth and provide
failover. Previously, in order to deploy this feature in Windows Servers, sys
admins had to rely on third-party vendors. For example, for fault tolerant NIC
teaming, Microsoft had advised that network adapter vendors were the ones to go
to for support. In Windows Server 2008 R2 NIC teaming is also achieved by
installing the Microsoft Failover Cluster Virtual Adapter. However, based on
demos Microsoft previewed, this is the first time Microsoft offers in-the-box
NIC teaming of up to 32 NICs (theoretically) with no dependency on the type of
network cards installed.
Storage across Remote SMB 2.2 File Shares: In Windows Server 8 access to shared storage is done by accessing file shares. The latest Windows OS does not employ logical unit numbers (LUNs) to identify logical units in a storage system. By using shared storage across SMB 2.3, admins have easier provisioning and management of shared storage by using regular file shares. This means you can have sophisticated shared storage of data from a variety of file servers—client files, VMs, databases—without a storage guru.
Interested in Windows Server 8 for IT Pros? Read This Blog !
1 comment:
great info, good!!
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