IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a- Box on IBM System x Solution Guide The IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure offers robust, cost-effective, and manageable virtual desktop solutions for a wide range of clients, user types, and industry segments. These solutions can help increase business flexibility and staff productivity, reduce IT complexity, and simplify security and compliance. Based on a validated IBM reference architecture design, the infrastructure supports various hardware, software, and hypervisor platforms and ensures high level of confidence in component interoperability and workload support. Citrix VDI-in-a-Box is a pre-packaged purpose-built Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) software appliance for small and medium sized businesses and enterprise departments. Its all-in-one design with a shared-nothing architecture allows easy and cost-efficient initial deployments, and it supports seamless scalability to meet growing demands. This IBM Redbooks Solution Guide describes the SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure offering with Citrix VDI-in-a-Box running on IBM System x servers (Figure 1). Figure 1. The Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution Did you know? IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 1
Did you know? With the Hosted Virtual Desktop (HVD) approach, all applications and data that the user interacts with are stored centrally and securely in the data center. These applications never leave the data center boundaries. This setup makes management and administration much easier and gives users access to data and applications from anywhere and at anytime. Unlike other VDI offerings, Citrix VDI-in-a-Box supports built-in connection brokering, provisioning, scalability, and availability features that employ shared-nothing architecture with cost-efficient IBM System x server internal storage. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 2
Business value VDI gives users the freedom to access their desktop applications from any device. It recently gained traction in the market because of its many benefits, including increased security and reduced total cost of ownership (TCO). Companies that offer VDI to their employees reduce the number of desktop applications and licenses they must manage, and then reduce their ongoing operational costs. Concurrently, with fewer applications to manage, companies can more tightly control authorized access to the applications, protect corporate data, and ensure standards compliance. Several key factors drive virtual desktops in today s business climate: Data security and compliance concerns The complexity and costs of managing existing desktop environments An increasingly mobile workforce The changing ownership of endpoint devices with bring-your-own-device (BYOD) programs The need for rapid recovery from theft, failure, and disasters SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure offers the following advantages: Lowers the TCO over an extended period compared to traditional PCs. Simplifies desktop administration, support, and management. Enhances security and compliance management. Improves availability and reliability. Enables users to work anytime, anywhere quickly and easily regardless of location or device. Better supports growth initiatives for mobility and flexible work locations. Solution overview Citrix VDI-in-a-Box is delivered as an integrated software appliance that supports most popular and robust virtualization environments, such as VMware vsphere, Microsoft Hyper-V, and Citrix XenServer. It is simple and affordable, and it allows Windows administrators to deploy a VDI infrastructure with minimal cost and effort. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution with Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x includes the following components: User access devices Desktop PCs Thin clients Notebooks Handheld mobile devices Virtual infrastructure software Citrix VDI-in-a-Box Hardware platform IBM System x Figure 2 shows the functional components of a SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 3
Figure 2. Functional components of the SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution The SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution consists of three functional layers: User access layer The user access layer is a user entry point in to the virtual infrastructure. It includes traditional desktop PCs, thin clients, notebooks, and other handheld mobile devices. Virtual infrastructure services layer The virtual infrastructure services layer provides a secure, compliant, and highly available desktop environment to the user. The user access layer interacts with the virtual infrastructure layer through display protocols. The choice of RDP and ICA display protocols is available in Citrix VDI-in-a-Box. Storage services layer The storage services layer stores user persona, profiles, image repositories, and VM disk files. The storage protocol is an interface between the virtual infrastructure services and storage services. VDI-ina-Box supports server internal direct-attached storage (DAS) for image repositories and VM disk files. External network-attached storage (NAS) is used for storing user profiles (Common Internet File System (CIFS) storage protocol), and personal virtual disk files (Network File System (NFS) protocol) when persistent HVD high availability is required. The virtual infrastructure services layer has the following key functional components: Hypervisor The hypervisor provides a virtualized environment for running virtual machines (VMs) with the desktop operating systems in them. These VMs are called hosted virtual desktops (HVDs). Hosted virtual desktops An HVD is a VM that runs a user desktop operating system and applications. Connection broker The connection broker is the point of contact for the client access devices that request the virtual desktops. The connection broker manages the authentication function and ensures that only valid users are allowed access to the infrastructure. When authenticated, it directs the clients to their assigned desktops. If the virtual desktop is unavailable, the connection broker works with the management and provisioning services to have the VM ready and available. Management and provisioning services IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 4
Management and provisioning services allow the centralized management of the virtual infrastructure, providing a single console to manage multiple tasks. These services provide image management, lifecycle management, and monitoring for hosted VMs. High availability services High availability (HA) services ensure that the VM is up and running even if a critical software or hardware failure occurs. HA can be a part of connection broker functions for stateless (also knows as pooled) HVDs or a separate failover process for dedicated HVDs. A dedicated (persistent or personal) HVD is assigned permanently to the specific user, similar to a traditional desktop PC. Users log in to the same virtual desktop image every time they connect. All changes that they make and each application that they install are saved when the user logs off. The dedicated desktop model is best for users who need the ability to install more applications and store data locally. Personal HVD high availability: External shared storage is required to achieve high availability for persistent HVDs, and it stores personal virtual disk files. A stateless (pooled or non-persistent) HVD is allocated temporarily to the user. After the user logs off, changes to the image are discarded (reset). Then, the desktop becomes available for the next user, or a new desktop is created for the next user session. A persistent user experience (the ability to personalize the desktop and save data) is achieved through user profile management, folder redirection, and similar approaches. Specific individual applications can be provided to nonpersistent desktops by using application virtualization technologies, if required. Pooled HVD high availability: External shared storage is not required to achieve high availability for pooled HVDs. At the time of writing, IBM tested pooled HVD configurations as a part of its Reference Architecture for Citrix VDI-in-a-Box validation process, so this solution guide is focused on pooled virtual desktops. Personal virtual desktops are planned to be incorporated into the solution guide later in 2014. Figure 3 shows the logical connectivity topology that supports the pooled VDI solution. Figure 3. Pooled VDI solution logical connectivity topology Two networks are defined in the pooled desktop VDI solution: Management network. Supports VDI management, provisioning, and monitoring tasks. Client network. Connects VDI clients (users) to VDI servers. Functional layers and components of a VDI environment are supported by a hardware infrastructure platform IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 5
that must provide the following features: Sufficient computing power to support demanding workloads Scalability to satisfy future growth requirements Reliability to support business continuity and 24x7 operations Cost-efficient storage to handle large amounts of VM and user data IBM System x servers represent a robust infrastructure platform that satisfies these requirements. Hardware platform IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 6
Hardware platform Combined into a single infrastructure, IBM server and networking systems offer unique capabilities that make this infrastructure an exceptional choice for the deployment of the SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution: IBM System x servers IBM System x servers are developed, quality tested, and certified by IBM, the leading vendor in technology patents for 21 years running, and they are backed by incomparable worldwide service and support. IBM System x servers deliver business value over the long term because of advancements in scalability, reliability, and performance, which is combined with flexible configuration options, energyefficient components, and robust systems management tools. System x servers provide sufficient processing capacity for the most demanding SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure deployments. x3550 M4 (1U rack-mounted) and x3650 M4 (2U rack-mounted) are dualsocket Intel Xeon processor E5-2600 v2 product family-based servers. They support the most powerful 130 W Intel Xeon processor E5-2697 v2, up to 768 GB of memory, and built-in, cost-efficient four 1 Gb Ethernet connections to provide affordable HVD deployments that leverage existing Ethernet connectivity. The x3550 M4 supports up to eight 2.5-inch drives (hard disk drives (HDDs) and solidstate drives (SSDs)), and the x3650 M4 supports up to sixteen 2.5-inch drives (HDDs and SSDs). External shared storage (optional, to store user folders, shared folders, and profile data in the high availability configurations) Combined with the IBM System x servers and preinstalled by an IBM Business Partner, Windows Storage Server 2012 delivers enterprise-class storage management technology in an affordable, all-inone solution. It is a great choice for your business regardless of whether you are a first-time user of network-attached storage (NAS) or you are deploying advanced storage solutions. High availability for storage is a mandatory requirement for many VDI deployments. Windows Storage Server, IBM System x servers, and IBM Storwize V3700 storage can be combined into a highly available unified gateway solution. In this solution, Windows Storage Server 2012 is deployed as a failover cluster with two IBM System x rack servers and the external shared V3700 storage system. The high availability cluster performs file serving tasks hosting SMB and NFS file shares for Windows based VDI users. Storwize V3700 delivers efficient, entry-level configurations that are designed to meet the needs of small and mid-sized businesses. Designed to provide organizations with the ability to consolidate and share data at an affordable price, Storwize V3700 offers advanced software capabilities that are usually found only in more expensive systems. Built upon innovative IBM technology, Storwize V3700 addresses the block storage requirements of small and mid-sized organizations and accommodates the most common storage network technologies to enable easy implementation and management. In summary, IBM System x servers in a SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure solution can help you achieve the following advantages: Sufficient computing power to support demanding workloads by offering large memory capacity and affordable dual-socket performance with the Intel Xeon processor E5 family Scalability to satisfy future growth requirements because of integrated expansion capabilities Simplified management and higher availability with built-in Integrated Management Module II and advanced error prevention and recovery technologies, such as Chipkill, Predictive Failure Analysis (PFA), lightpath diagnostics, and Dynamic System Analysis (DSA) Cost-efficient storage to handle large amounts of VM and user data with either server internal storage and advanced RAID capabilities or a unified NAS gateway solution with V3700 Solution architecture Citrix VDI-in-a-Box is delivered as an integrated software appliance. It includes everything that is needed for a IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 7
traditional VDI environment: connection broker, desktop provisioning, load balancing, and user profile management. It uses a shared-nothing architecture, which is a distributed computing model in which each compute node has its own set of resources that are not shared across the nodes. Such an approach allows seamless scalability and avoids costly external storage infrastructure to keep costs optimized. The VDI-in-a- Box solution delivers a rich, high-definition user experience across any network that uses Citrix HDX technologies. By using the open architecture of Citrix VDI-in-a-Box, customers can adopt desktop virtualization quickly and easily with any hypervisor, storage, or management infrastructure. The following VDI-in-a-Box features provide a familiar experience for the user: Multiple monitor support 3D graphics business application support Multimedia support Printing from a virtual desktop Accessing USB devices and other peripheral devices Roaming user profiles VDI-in-a-Box offers several levels of security features, including the following ones: Active Directory user authentication Built-in generic user accounts SSL tunneling to ensure that all connections are encrypted The following Citrix VDI-in-a-Box features provide centralized administration and management: Microsoft Active Directory Web-based administrative console Automated desktop provisioning and storage optimization VDI-in-a-Box includes the following scalability, integration, and optimization features: VMware vsphere, Microsoft Hyper-V, and XenServer hypervisor support High-availability grid architecture to achieve cost-effective shared-nothing scalability, high levels of availability, and advanced resource allocation control for virtual desktops Provisioning of desktop images that share virtual disks with a master image Figure 4 shows the components of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 8
Figure 4. Components of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution The hardware components of the solution are IBM System x servers (x3550 M4 or x3650 M4) and the optional external NAS storage. High availability: High availability is strongly recommended for both VDI servers and storage system to help avoid planned and unplanned downtime. IBM System x servers The x3550 M4 or x3650 M4 servers contain an embedded VMware ESXi hypervisor to host VMs that are used for virtual desktops and for management and provisioning tasks. Each VDI node hosts a vdimanager virtual appliance that supports connection brokering, load balancing, VM provisioning and management, and high availability grid operations for both pooled and personal desktops. Servers in the grid are configured with local HDD storage that hosts image repository and VM disk files. High availability is provided by the vdimanager. It keeps multiple copies of images and configuration data across the nodes in the grid. If a VM or node failure occurs, the vdimanager has sufficient information to re-create the failed VMs and redirect the user to them. External NAS storage (optional) External NAS storage can be used to achieve high availability for the storage of user folders, shared folders, and profile data if needed. A highly available NAS gateway consists of two x3550 M4 dualsocket rack servers running Windows Storage Server 2012 Standard and connected to the IBM Storwize V3700 shared storage system. Windows Storage Server 2012 based unified storage with the flexible choice of storage protocols (iscsi, SMB, or NFS) can provide required performance levels for the most demanding server IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 9
applications while significantly lowering deployment and support costs. It does not require client access licenses and provides a virtually unlimited number of supported clients for storage sharing purposes. The Citrix VDI-in-a-Box services have the following software components: Citrix Receiver Citrix Receiver is a client software for accessing virtual desktops by using the Independent Channel Architecture (ICA) protocol. The client software can run on different types of user access devices, including desktop PCs, notebooks, and thin clients. Citrix Virtual Desktop Agent Citrix Virtual Desktop Agent is installed on virtual desktops and supports Citrix Receiver direct connections through the ICA. Citrix vdimanager Citrix vdimanager is a virtual software appliance running in a dedicated VM on a VDI node. It is responsible for load balancing, connection brokering, authenticating users, and provisioning and managing virtual desktops. Authentication of users is performed through Windows Active Directory. VMware ESXi VMware ESXi is a hypervisor that is used to host VMs. Usage scenarios In the healthcare industry, staff are constantly on the move, but need fast, security-rich access to patients electronic medical records that are in compliance with data privacy regulations. By combining single sign-on (SSO) capabilities with a virtual desktop infrastructure, healthcare staff can access multiple systems and applications to obtain medical records or images with a single SSO. In the education industry, a virtual desktop infrastructure can help schools extend the lifecycle of existing PCs, in addition to allowing the schools to adopt new technology. Students can receive the same quality of education, regardless of the availability of hardware, device, or location. At the same time, IT staff can reduce the time, cost, and complexity that are associated with maintenance, upgrades, provisioning, reimaging, and repairing the school s technology assets. For the public sector, local, state, and federal agencies must extend support to an ever-increasing collection of personal devices and must do so under stringent security measures. A virtual desktop can give personnel the anytime, anywhere access they need to maintain productivity. It can also provide the centralized security and control that are necessary to help maintain extreme data confidentiality. Agencies can also expedite provisioning and upgrades to multiple devices at a sustainable level of cost and effort. Integration IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 10
Integration IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure enables easy integration with optional security and endpoint management technologies, including the following technologies: IBM Security Access Manager for Enterprise Single Sign-On offers streamlined user access with automated sign-on and sign-off plus a single password for all applications. This technology can reduce help desk costs, improve productivity, and strengthen security for virtualized desktops. IBM Tivoli Endpoint Manager combines endpoint and security management into a single solution. With this solution, your team can see and manage physical and virtual endpoints, such as servers, desktops, roaming notebooks, and specialized equipment, such as point-of-sale devices, automated teller machines (ATMs), and self-service kiosks. Reference design The configurations that are described in this solution guide provide a balanced design point that does not overstress the processor, memory, or storage. If users require larger desktops, then more memory can be added to the System x servers. A published desktop golden image is automatically distributed across the servers in the grid, and the changes that are made to any copy of the golden image are updated across the servers in the grid. Each server in the grid stores all the golden image files. High availability of a solution is required for business continuity. High availability must be built end to end and some parts are outside the scope of this solution. The reference design in this solution guide has built-in N+1 server redundancy. In normal circumstances, the servers are less loaded. If a server goes down for any reason, users can be restarted on one of the remaining servers. The Citrix VDI-in-a-box Grid Virtual IP feature allows the configuration of a single IP address for the whole grid and automatically routes a desktop request to an available server. The addition of the highly available NAS gateway consisting of System x servers and the Storwize V3700 storage system allows user profiles and data to be stored on shared storage so if a server goes down, the user can continue working on another server. The HDDs in the VDI servers should be configured as RAID 10 arrays for performance. The Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution has the following key building blocks: 75-user pooled HVD building block 150-user pooled HVD building block vsphere hypervisor External NAS storage (optional) Table 1 shows the building blocks of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution that are used in 75-, 150-, 300-, and 600-user configurations (assuming the user is a task worker, and the VM memory size is 1.5 GB). The actual number of users or virtual desktops per node depends on the user type and memory, processor, and storage requirements for those VMs. Table 1. Building blocks of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 11
Building block 75-user pooled HVD node (N+1 redundancy) External NAS storage (optional) Number of elements in a building block 75 users 150 users 300 users 600 users Element type and configuration 2 - - - Pooled HVD server (x3550 M4 or x3650 M4) 2x Intel Xeon processor E5-2630 v2 128 GB memory 1x ServeRAID M5110 controller with 1 GB of flashbacked cache 8x 300 GB 15,000 rpm SAS HDDs 2x 1 Gb Ethernet ports 1x Embedded ESXi hypervisor - 1 1 1 Highly available NAS gateway (2x x3550 M4 with Storwize V3700) 150-user pooled HVD node (N+1 redundancy) - 2 3 5 Pooled HVD server (x3550 M4 or x3650 M4) 2x Intel Xeon processor E5-2650 v2 256 GB memory 1x ServeRAID M5110 controller with 1 GB of flashbacked cache 8x 300 GB 15,000 rpm SAS HDDs 2x 1 Gb Ethernet ports 1x Embedded ESXi hypervisor Figure 5 shows the components that are used in a typical 300-user reference design of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution that uses x3550 M4 servers, with pooled HVDs. The solution can also be scaled further to a larger configuration by adding more respective HVD server building blocks. External NAS storage is already in the client environment. VDI servers and clients leverage the existing 1 GbE network infrastructure, or additional IBM RackSwitch G8052 switches (shown in the figure) can be deployed. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 12
Figure 5. Typical 300-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration The solution components are described in the Table 2. Table 2. Typical 300-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration Diagram Description reference 3x x3550 M4 servers for pooled HVDs (N+1 redundancy) 2x Intel Xeon processor E5-2650 v2 256 GB memory 8x 300 GB 15,000 rpm SAS HDDs 2x integrated 1 Gb Ethernet ports 1x Embedded ESXi hypervisor on a USB key 2x IBM RackSwitch G8052 network switches (optional) Figure 6 shows the components that are used in a typical 600-user reference design of the Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x solution that uses the x3650 M4 servers, with pooled HVDs. The solution also can be scaled further to a larger configuration by adding more respective HVD server building blocks. External NAS storage is deployed on x3550 M4 servers running Windows Storage Server 2012 that are connected to the external Storwize V3700 storage system. VDI servers and clients leverage the existing 1 GbE network infrastructure, or additional IBM RackSwitch G8052 switches (shown in the figure) can be deployed. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 13
Figure 6. Typical 600-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration In the described configuration, x3550 M4 NAS servers are connected to the V3700 storage through 1 Gb iscsi, using a dedicated storage VLAN in the 1 Gb Ethernet network. The solution components are described in the Table 3. Table 3. Typical 600-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 14
Diagram reference Description 5x x3650 M4 servers for pooled HVDs (N+1 redundancy) Each x3650 M4 server: 2x Intel Xeon processor E5-2650 v2 256 GB memory 8x 300 GB 15,000 rpm SAS HDDs 2x 1 Gb Ethernet ports 1x Embedded ESXi hypervisor on a USB key 2x IBM RackSwitch G8052 network switches (optional) 2x IBM System x3550 M4 (NAS gateway, optional) Each x3550 M4 server: 2x Intel Xeon processor E5-2620 v2 48 GB memory 1x ServeRAID H1110 controller 2x 500 GB SATA 3.5-inch HDDs in a mirrored pair for the operating system 2x 1 Gb Ethernet ports 1x Windows Storage Server 2012 Reseller Option Kit 1x IBM Storwize V3700 storage system (optional) 2x RAID controllers 4x 1 Gb iscsi ports per controller 24x 300 GB 10K rpm SAS 2.5-inch HDDs in an RAID-50 for up to 6.6 TB of usable data storage for the server applications 12x 2 TB SATA 3.5-inch drives in an RAID-5 for up to 14 TB of the usable data storage for the information workers data, software distribution packages, image repositories, and archives Ordering information Table 4 shows the part numbers and quantities for ordering the configuration that is shown in Table 2. Table 4. Ordering information for 300-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 15
Diagram reference Description Servers for 300-user pooled HVDs (N+1 redundancy) x3550 M4, Xeon 8C E5-2650v2 95W 2.6GHz/1866MHz/20MB, 1x8GB, O/Bay 2.5in HS SAS/SATA, SR M5110, 550W p/s, Rack Part number 7914G3x* 3 Intel Xeon 8C Processor Model E5-2650v2 95W 2.6GHz/1866MHz/20MB 46W2840 3 16GB (1x16GB, 2Rx4, 1.5V) PC3-14900 CL13 ECC DDR3 1866MHz LP RDIMM 00D5048 48 x3550 M4 plus 4x 2.5in HDD Assembly Kit 81Y6657 3 IBM 300GB 2.5in G2HS 15K 6Gbps SAS HDD 81Y9670 24 IBM System x 550W High Efficiency Platinum AC Power Supply 94Y6668 3 IBM USB Memory Key for VMWARE ESXi 5.1 41Y8311 3 Network switches (optional) IBM System Networking RackSwitch G8052 Varies 2 * The x in the part number represents a country-specific letter. For example, the EMEA part number is 7914G3G, and the US part number is 7914G3U. For specific details, ask a local IBM sales representative. Table 5 shows the part numbers and quantities for ordering the configuration that is shown in Table 3. Table 5. Ordering information for 600-user Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x configuration Diagram reference Description Part number Servers for 600-user pooled HVDs (N+1 redundancy) x3650 M4, Xeon 8C E5-2650v2 95W 2.6GHz/1866MHz/20MB, 1x8GB, O/Bay HS 2.5in SAS/SATA, SR M5110e, 750W p/s, Rack 7915G3x* 5 Intel Xeon 8C Processor Model E5-2650v2 95W 2.6GHz/1866MHz/20MB 46W4365 5 16GB (1x16GB, 2Rx4, 1.5V) PC3-14900 CL13 ECC DDR3 1866MHz LP RDIMM 00D5048 80 IBM 300GB 2.5in G2HS 15K 6Gbps SAS HDD 81Y9670 40 IBM System x 750W High Efficiency Platinum AC Power Supply 94Y6669 5 IBM USB Memory Key for VMWARE ESXi 5.1 41Y8311 5 Network switches (optional) IBM System Networking RackSwitch G8052 Varies 2 NAS storage gateway (optional) x3550 M4, Xeon 6C E5-2620v2 80W 2.1GHz/1600MHz/15MB, 1x8GB, O/Bay 3.5in HS SAS/SATA, SR H1110, 550W p/s, Rack 7914C5x* 2 Intel Xeon 6C Processor Model E5-2620v2 80W 2.1GHz/1600MHz/15MB 46W2837 2 8GB (1x8GB, 1Rx4, 1.35V) PC3L-12800 CL11 ECC DDR3 1600MHz LP RDIMM 00D5036 10 IBM 500GB 7.2K 6Gbps NL SATA 3.5in G2HS HDD 81Y9786 4 IBM System x 550W High Efficiency Platinum AC Power Supply 94Y6668 2 Win Stg Srv 2012 Standard (2CPU) - English ROK 00Y6302 2 External shared storage (optional) IBM Storwize V3700 SFF Dual Control Enclosure 2072S2C 1 300GB 2.5in 10K rpm 6Gb SAS HDD 00Y2501 24 1Gb iscsi 4 Port Host Interface Card 00L4584 2 IBM Storwize V3700 LFF Expansion Enclosure 2072LEU 1 2TB 3.5in 7.2K rpm 6Gb SAS NL HDD 00Y2471 12 0.6m SAS Cable (mini-sas HD to mini-sas HD) 00Y2465 2 Qty Qty IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 16
* The x in the part number represents a country-specific letter. For example, the EMEA part number is 7915G3G, and the US part number is 7915G3U. For specific details, ask a local IBM sales representative. Related information For more information, see the following documents: IBM System x3550 M4 Product Guide, TIPS0851 http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/tips0851.html IBM System x3650 M4 Product Guide, TIPS0850 http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/tips0850.html Windows Storage Server 2012 on IBM System x, TIPS0946 http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/tips0946.html IBM System Networking RackSwitch G8052 Product Guide, TIPS0813 http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/abstracts/tips0813.html IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure offering home page http://www.ibm.com/systems/virtualization/desktop-virtualization xref: IBM System x Reference Sheets http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/xref IBM Redbooks Product Guides for IBM System x servers and options http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/portals/systemx IBM System x Configuration and Options Guide http://www.ibm.com/systems/xbc/cog IBM System x Support Portal http://ibm.com/support/entry/portal IBM Offering Information page (to search on announcement letters, sales manuals, or both): http://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/index.wss?request_locale=en On this page, enter IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure, select the information type, and then click Search. On the next page, narrow your search results by geography and language. IBM SmartCloud Desktop Infrastructure: Citrix VDI-in-a-Box on IBM System x 17
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