I Just Love VMWare

Published By: Doug Hughes on Dec 4, 2008 at 2:56 PM

Times Viewed: 1954

Categories: General

The Alagad crew (well my team at least) is happily working with a client to help them create a next-generation product data management system.  This is easily the largest and most complex system I've ever worked on.  Yesterday I was breaking ground on the next and final major section of the application. 

I spent the previous days coming up with use cases, etc, and planning my approach to the architecture for this section.  As a part of that I defined a set of SQL tables and I spent yesterday actually creating the tables. 

I tend to create tables in my local database and, once they're finalized, I email scripts to our DBA who adds them to the "gold" copy of the database which is deployed to our client's servers.

So, today, I'm working through some high-level code and I realize I need the latest copy of the database.  So I grab the latest revision out of SVN and restore it over my local copy.  (Anyone see where this is headed?)  And get back to work. This is when I start getting weird errors about objects not existing. 

D'oh!

I'd restored over my changes without first generating my scripts!  The first thing I do is look for my SQL backups.  (Yes, I run SQL backups of development databases.)  But, for some unknown reason it seems like my SQL Agent has been shut off since August!  So, needless to say, I had no backups of the database. 

So, after complaining to a co-worker and enabling SQL Agent, I was about to get back into recreating tables when I realized a couple things:

  1. SQL Server is running in VMWare.
  2. I'm on a Mac using Time Machine so I should be able to restore yesterday's backup of the VM.
  3. I don't need to restore yesterday's backup!  I have automatic snapshots enabled in VMWare!

To solve my dilemma all I had to was create a snapshop of the VM's current state, roll back to the last snapshot, generate my scripts, roll forward and apply my scripts. 

Problem solved!  I really love VMWare!

3 Comments

VMWare Fusion is the perfect way to run Windows, and having multiple instances of Windows for different needs really makes life easy. I could go on...

I sound like a commercial...they should pay me.

Posted By: Christopher Vigliotti on Dec 4, 2008

One of the variety of reasons why I love the fact that DataFaucet generates database tables from CFC metadata or XML. Assuming that I'm using that feature (which I usually do), then I'd never be in the situation of not having a copy of the scripts for a table or collection of tables due to restoring a DB backup, because all the info is inherent in the CFC sitting in my SVN repository.

http://datafaucet.riaforge.org/blog/index.cfm/2008/10/14/BestOfBothWorlds

Posted By: ike on Dec 4, 2008

Other than the snapshots, VMware is far more performant, uses way less memory, has a much wider variety of free appliances to be downloaded, has a free McAfee install for Windows installations, and MUCH better host-OS integration than Parallels.

Oh yeah, VMware also supports 3D acceleration as well.

Yeah, VMware FTW.

Posted By: Jared Rypka-Hauer on Jan 5, 2009

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