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VMware or Microsoft? Quick Comparison between vSphere 5.5 and Windows Server 2012 R2 Hyper-V

In lots of customer discussions, the one thing that comes out often - How does Microsoft Virtualization stcak ( Hyper-V & System Center 2012 R2) compares with VMWare virtulization stack (vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5). I have tried focus on real-world perspective based on my experience implementing both solutions in the field throughout my career. In this article, I’ll provide a summarized comparison of the feature sets provided by each of these latest releases using the currently available public information from both Microsoft and VMware as of this article’s publication date for additional reference.

How to compare?

Rather than simply comparing feature-by-feature using just simple check-marks in each category, I’ll try to provide as much detail as possible for you to intelligently compare each area.  As I’m sure you’ve heard before, sometimes the “devil is in the details”.

For each comparison area, I’ll rate the related capabilities with the following color coded rankings:

  • Supported – Fully supported without any additional products or licenses
  • Limited Support – Significant limitations when using related feature, or limitations in comparison to the competing solution represented
  • Not Supported – Not supported at all or without the addition of other product licensing costs

In this article, I’ve organized the comparison into the following sections:

  • Licensing
  • Virtualization Scalability
  • VM Portability, High Availability and Disaster Recovery
  • Storage
  • Networking
  • Guest Operating Systems

Are you keeping score at home?

Of course, not all of the features and capabilities presented in the summary below may be important to you.  As you review the comparison summary of each section, just make a note of the particular features that you're likely to use in your environment.  When you're done, tally up the Green ratings in each column to determine which platform achieves a better score in meeting the needs of your organization.

Here we go…

Licensing: At-A-Glance

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
# of Physical CPUs per License 2 1 With Microsoft, each Datacenter Edition license provides licensing for up to 2 physical CPUs per Host.  Additional licenses can be “stacked” if more than 2 physical CPUs are present. With VMware, a vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus license must be purchased for each physical CPU.  This difference in CPU licensing is one of the factors that can contribute to increased licensing costs.  In addition, a minimum of one license of vCenter Server 5.5 is required for vSphere deployments.
# of Managed OSE’s per License Unlimited Unlimited Both solutions provide the ability to manage an unlimited number of Operating System Environments per licensed Host.
# of Windows Server VM Licenses per Host Unlimited 0 With VMware, Windows Server VM licenses must still be purchased separately. In environments virtualizing Windows Server workloads, this can contribute to a higher overall cost when virtualizing with VMware.VMware does include licenses for an unlimited # of VMs running SUSE Linux Enterprise Server per Host.
Includes Anti-virus / Anti-malware protection Yes - System Center Endpoint Protection agents included for both Host and VMs with System Center 2012 R2  Yes - Includes vShield Endpoint Protection which deploys as EPSEC thin agent in each VM + separate virtual appliance.  
Includes full SQL Database Server licenses for management databases Yes – Includes all needed database server licensing to manage up to 1,000 hosts and 25,000 VMs per management server. No – Must purchase additional database server licenses to scale beyond managing 100 hosts and 3,000 VMs with vCenter Server Appliance. VMware licensing includes an internal vPostgres database that supports managing up to 100 hosts and 3,000 VMs via vCenter Server Appliance. See VMware vSphere 5.5 Configuration Maximums for details.
Includes licensing for Enterprise Operations Monitoring and Management of hosts, guest VMs and application workloads running within VMs. Yes – Included in System Center 2012 R2 No – Operations Monitoring and Management requires separate license for vCenter Operations Manager or upgrade to vSphere with Operations Management  
Includes licensing for Private Cloud Management capabilities – pooled resources, self-service, delegation, automation, elasticity, chargeback/showback Yes – Included in System Center 2012 R2 No – Private Cloud Management capabilities require additional cost of VMware vCloud Suite.  
Includes management tools for provisioning and managing VDI solutions for virtualized Windows desktops. Yes – Included in the RDS role of Windows Server 2012. No – VDI management requires additional cost of VMware Horizon View  
Includes web-based management console Yes – Included in System Center 2012 App Controller using web browsers supporting Silverlight 5, and free Windows Azure Pack for multi-tenant self-service VM management using web browsers supporting HTML5/JavaScript. Yes – Included in vSphere Web Client using IE 8,9,10, Firefox and Chrome.  

Virtualization Scalability: At-a-Glance

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
Maximum # of Logical Processors per Host 320 320 With vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus, VMware has “caught up” to Microsoft in terms of Maximum # of Logical Processors supported per Host.
Maximum Physical RAM per Host 4TB 4TB With vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus, VMware has “caught up” to Microsoft in terms of Maximum Physical RAM supported per Host.
Maximum Active VMs per Host 1,024 512  
Maximum Virtual CPUs per VM 64 64 When using VMware FT, only 1 Virtual CPU per VM can be used.
Hot-Adjust Virtual CPU Resources to VM Yes - Hyper-V provides the ability to increase and decrease Virtual Machine limits for processor resources on running VMs.  Yes - Can Hot-Add virtual CPUs for running VMs on selected Guest Operating Systems and adjust Limits/Shares for CPU resources.  VMware Hot-Add CPU feature requires supported Guest Operating System. Check VMware Compatibility Guide for details. VMware Hot-Add CPU feature not supported when using VMware FT
Maximum Virtual RAM per VM 1TB 1TB When using VMware FT, only 64GB of Virtual RAM per VM can be used.
Hot-Add Virtual RAM to VM Yes ( Dynamic Memory ) Yes  Requires supported Guest Operating System.
Dynamic Memory Management Yes ( Dynamic Memory ) Yes ( Memory Ballooning ) Note that memory overcommit is not supported for VMs that are configured as an MSCS VM Guest Cluster. VMware vSphere 5.5 also supports another memory technique: Transparent Page Sharing (TPS).  While TPS was useful in the past on legacy server hardware platforms and operating systems, it is no longer effective in many environments due to modern servers and operating systems supporting Large Memory Pages (LMP) for improved memory performance.
Guest NUMA Support Yes Yes NUMA = Non-Uniform Memory Access.  Guest NUMA support is particularly important for scalability when virtualizing large multi-vCPU VMs on Hosts with a large number of physical processors.
Maximum # of physical Hosts per Cluster 64 32  
Maximum # of VMs per Cluster 8,000 4,000  
Virtual Machine Snapshots Yes - Up to 50 snapshots per VM are supported. Yes - Up to 32 snapshots per VM chain are supported, but VMware only recommends 2-to-3. In addition, VM Snapshots are not supported for VMs using an iSCSI initiator.  
Integrated Application Load Balancing for Scaling-Out Application Tiers Yes - via System Center 2012 R2 VMM No – Requires additional purchase of vCloud Network and Security (vCNS) or vCloud Suite.  
Bare metal deployment of new Hypervisor hosts and clusters Yes - via System Center 2012 R2 VMM Yes - VMware Auto Deploy and Host Profiles supports bare metal deployment of new hosts into an existing cluster, but does not support bare metal deployment of new clusters.  
Bare metal deployment of new Storage hosts and clusters Yes - via System Center 2012 R2 VMM No  
Manage GPU Virtualization for Advanced VDI Graphics Yes - Server GPUs can be virtualized and pooled across VDI VMs via RemoteFX and native VDI management features in RDS role. Yes - via vDGA and vSGA features, but requires separate purchase of VMware Horizon View to manage VDI desktop pools.  
Virtualization of USB devices Yes - Client USB devices can be passed to VMs via Remote Desktop connections. Direct redirection of USB storage from Host possible with Windows-to-Go certified devices. Direct redirection of other USB devices possible with third-party solutions. Yes - via USB Pass-through support.  
Virtualization of Serial Ports Yes - Virtual Machine Serial Ports can be connected to Named Pipes on a host. Named Pipes can then be connected to Physical Serial Ports on a host using free PipeToCom tool. Live Migration of VMs using virtualized serial ports can be provided via 3rd party software, such as Serial over Ethernet and Network Serial Port, or 3rd party hardware, such as Digi PortServer TS and Lantronix UDS1100 Yes - Virtual Machine Serial Ports can be connected to Named Pipes, Files or Physical Serial Ports on a host. vMotion of VMs using virtualized serial ports can be supported when using 3rd party virtual serial port concentrators, such as Avocent ACS v6000. Note that the ability to perform Virtual Machine Live Migration (or vMotion) for VM's with virtualized serial ports requires a third-party option on both solutions compared.
Minimum Disk Footprint while still providing management of multiple virtualization hosts and guest VM's ~800KB - Micro-kernelized hypervisor ( Ring -1 ) ~5GB - Drivers + Management ( Parent Partition - Ring 0 + 3 ) Microsoft Hyper-V uses a modern micro-kernelized hypervisor architecture, which minimizes the components needed within the hypervisor running in Ring -1, while still providing strong scalability, performance, VM security, Virtual Disk security and broad device driver compatibility. ~155MB - Monolithic hypervisor w/ Drivers( Ring -1 + 0 ) ~4GB - Management ( vCenter Server Appliance - Ring 3 ) VMware vSphere uses a larger classic monolithic hypervisor approach, which incorporates additional code, such as device drivers, into the hypervisor. This approach can make device driver compatibility an issue in some cases, but offers increased compatibility with legacy server hardware that does not support Intel-VT / AMD-V hardware-assisted virtualization. Microsoft and VMware each use different approaches for hypervisor architecture.  Each approach offers different advantages as noted in the columns to the left. See When it comes to hypervisors, does size really matter? for a more detailed real-world comparison. Frequently, patch management comes up when discussing disk footprints.  See Orchestrating Patch Management for more details on this area.
Boot from Flash Yes - Supported via Windows-to-Go devices. Yes  
Boot from SAN Yes - can leverage included iSCSI Target Server or 3rd party iSCSI / FC storage arrays using software or hardware boot providers. Yes - can leverage 3rd party iSCSI / FC storage arrays using software or hardware boot providers.  

VM Portability, High Availability and Disaster Recovery: At-a-Glance

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
Live Migration of running VMs Yes – Unlimited concurrent Live VM Migrations. Provides flexibility to cap at a maximum limit that is appropriate for your datacenter architecture. Particularly useful when using RDMA-enabled NICs. Yes – but limited to 4 concurrent vMotions per host when using 1GbE network adapters and 8 concurrent vMotions per host when using 10GbE network adapters.  
Live Migration of running VMs without shared storage between hosts Yes – Supported via Shared Nothing Live Migration Yes – Supported via Enhanced vMotion.  
Live Migration using compression of VM memory state Yes – Supported via Compressed Live Migration, providing up to a 2X increase in Live Migration speeds. No  
Live Migration over RDMA-enabled network adapters Yes – Supported via SMB-Direct Live Migration, providing up to a 10X increase in Live Migration speeds and low CPU utilization. No  
Live Migration of VMs Clustered with Windows Server Failover Clustering (MSCS Guest Cluster) Yes – by configuring relaxed monitoring of MSCS VM Guest Clusters. Nobased on documented vSphere MSCS Setup Limitations  
Highly Available VMs Yes – Highly available VMs can be configured on a Hyper-V Host cluster.  If the application running inside the VM is cluster aware, a VM Guest Cluster can also be configured via MSCS for faster application failover times. Yes – Supported by VMware HA, but with the limitations listed above when using MSCS VM Guest Clusters.  
Failover Prioritization of Highly Available VMs Yes – Supported by clustered priority settings on each highly available VM. Yes  
Affinity Rules for Highly Available VMs Yes – Supported by preferred cluster resource owners and anti-affinity VM placement rules. Yes  
Cluster-Aware Updating for Orchestrated Patch Management of Hosts. Yes – Supported via included Cluster-Aware Updating (CAU) role service. Yes – Supported by vSphere 5.5 Update Manager, but if using vCenter Server Appliance, need separate 64-bit Windows OS license for Update Management server. If supporting more than 5 hosts and 50 VMs, also need a separate SQL database server.  
Guest OS Application Monitoring for Highly Available VMs Yes Yes – Provided by vSphere App HA, but limited to only the following applications: Apache Tomcat, IIS, SQL Server, Apache HTTP Server, SharePoint, SpringSource tc Runtime.  
VM Guest Clustering via Shared Virtual Hard Disk files Yes – Provided via native Shared VHDX support for VM Guest Clusters Yes – But only Single-Host VM Guest Clustering supported via Shared VMDK files. For VM Guest Clusters that extend across multiple hosts, must use RDM instead.  
Maximum # of Nodes per VM Guest Cluster 64 5 - as documented in VMware Guidelines for Supported MSCS Configurations  
Intelligent Placement of new VM workloads Yes – Provided via Intelligent Placement in System Center 2012 R2 Yes – Provided via vSphere DRS, but without ability to intelligently place fault tolerant VMs using VMware FT.  
Automated Load Balancing of VM Workloads across Hosts Yes – Provided via Dynamic Optimization in System Center 2012 R2 Yes - Provided via vSphere DRS, but without ability to load-balance VM Guest Clusters using MSCS.  
Power Optimization of Hosts when load-balancing VMs Yes – Provided via Power Optimization in System Center 2012 R2 Yes – Provided via Distributed Power Management (DPM)within a vSphere DRS cluster, with the same limitations listed above for Automated Load Balancing.  
Fault Tolerant VMs No - The vast majority of application availability needs can be supported via Highly Available VMs and VM Guest Clustering on a more cost-effective and more-flexible basis than software-based fault tolerance solutions. If required for specific business applications, hardware-based fault tolerance server solutions can be leveraged where needed. Yes – Supported via VMware FT, but there are a large number of limitations when using VMware FT, including no support for the following when using VMware FT: VM Snapshots, Storage vMotion, VM Backups via vSphere Data Protection, Virtual SAN, Multi-vCPU VMs, More than 64GB of vRAM per VM. Software-based fault tolerance solutions, such as VMware FT, generally have significant limitations.  If applications require more comprehensive fault tolerance than provided via Highly Available VMs and VM Guest Clustering, hardware-based fault tolerance server solutions offer an alternative choice without the limits imposed by software-based fault tolerance solutions.
Backup VMs and Applications Yes - Provided via included System Center 2012 R2 Data Protection Manager with support for Disk-to-Disk, Tape and Cloud backups. Yes - Only supports Disk-to-Disk backup of VMs via vSphere Data Protection. Application-level backup integration requires separately purchased vSphere Data Protection Advanced.  
Site-to-Site Asynchronous VM Replication Yes – Provided via Hyper-V Replica with 30-second, 5-minute or 15-minute replication intervals. Minimum RPO = 30-seconds. Hyper-V Replica also supports extended replication across three sites for added protection. Yes – Provided via vSphere Replication with minimum replication interval of 15-minutes. Minimum RPO = 15-minutes. In VMware solution, Orchestrated Failover of Site-to-Site replication can be provided via separately licensed VMware SRM. In Microsoft solution, Orchestrated Failover of Site-to-Site replication can be provided via included PowerShell at no additional cost. Alternatively, a GUI interface for orchestrating failover can be provided via the separately licensed Windows Azure HRM service.

Storage: At-a-Glance

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
Maximum # Virtual SCSI Hard Disks per VM 256 ( Virtual SCSI ) 60 ( PVSCSI120 ( Virtual SATA )  
Maximum Size per Virtual Hard Disk 64TB 62TB vSphere 5.5 support for 62TB VMDK files is limited to when using VMFS5 and NFS datastores only.  In vSphere 5.5, VMFS3 datastores are still limited to 2TB VMDK files.  In vSphere 5.5, Hot-Expand, VMware FT , Virtual Flash Read Cache and Virtual SAN are not supported with 62TB VMDK files.
Native 4K Disk Support Yes - Hyper-V provides support for both 512e and 4K large sector-size disks to help ensure compatibility with emerging innovations in storage hardware. No  
Boot VM from Virtual SCSI disks Yes ( Generation 2 VMs ) Yes  
Hot-Add Virtual SCSI VM Storage for running VMs Yes Yes  
Hot-Expand Virtual SCSI Hard Disks for running VMs Yes Yesbut not supported with new 62TB VMDK files.  
Hot-Shrink Virtual SCSI Hard Disks for running VMs Yes No  
Storage Quality of Service Yes ( Storage QoS ) Yes ( Storage IO Control ) In VMware vSphere 5.5, Storage IO Control is not supported for RDM disks. In Windows Server 2012 R2, Storage QoS is not supported for Pass-through disks.
Virtual Fibre Channel to VMs Yes ( 4 Virtual FC NPIV ports per VM ) Yes ( 4 Virtual FC NPIV ports per VM ) - but not supported when using VM Guest Clusters with MSCS. vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus also includes a software initiator for FCoE support for VMs.  While not included inbox in Windows Server 2012 R2, a no-cost ISV solution is available here to provide FCoE support for Hyper-V VMs.
Live Migrate Virtual Storage for running VMs Yes - Unlimited concurrent Live Storage migrations. Provides flexibility to cap at a maximum limit that is appropriate for your datacenter architecture. Yes – but only up to 2 concurrent Storage vMotion operations per host / only up to 8 concurrent Storage vMotion operations per datastore. Storage vMotion is also not supported for MSCS VM Guest Clusters.  
Flash-based Read Cache Yes - Using SSDs in Tiered Storage Spaces, limited up to 160 physical disks and 480 TB total capacity. Yes – but only up to 400GB of cache per virtual disk / 2TB cumulative cache per host for all virtual disks. See this article for additional challenges and considerations when implementing Flash-based Read Caching on VMware.
Flash-based Write-back Cache Yes - Using SSDs in Storage Spaces for Write-back Cache. No  
SAN-like Storage Virtualization using commodity hard disks. Yes – Included in Windows Server 2012 R2 Storage Spaces. No VMware provides Virtual SAN which is included as an experimental feature in vSphere 5.5.  You can test and experiment with Virtual SAN, but VMware does not expect it to be used in a production environment.
Automated Tiered Storage between SSD and HDD using commodity hard disks. Yes – Included in Windows Server 2012 R2 Storage Spaces. No VMware provides Virtual SAN which is included as an experimental feature in vSphere 5.5.  You can test and experiment with Virtual SAN, but VMware does not expect it to be used in a production environment.
Can consume storage via iSCSI, NFS, Fibre Channel and SMB 3.0. Yes Yes – Except no support for SMB 3.0  
Can present storage via iSCSI, NFS and SMB 3.0. Yes – Available via included iSCSI Target Server, NFS Server and Scale-out SMB 3.0 Server support. All roles can be clustered for High Availability. No VMware provides vSphere Storage Appliance as a separately licensed product to deliver the ability to present NFS storage.
Storage Multipathing Yes – via MPIO and SMB Multichannel Yes – via VAMP  
SAN Offload Capability Yes – via ODX Yes – via VAAI  
Thin Provisioning and Trim Storage Yes – Available via Storage Spaces Thin Provisioning and NTFS Trim Notifications. Yes – but trim operations must be manually processed by running esxcli vmfs unmap command to reclaim disk space.  
Storage Encryption Yes – via BitLocker No  
Deduplication of storage used by running VMs Yes – Available via included Data Deduplication role service. No  
Provision VM Storage based on Storage Classifications Yes – via Storage Classifications in System Center 2012 R2 Yes – via Storage Policies, formerly called Storage Profiles, in vCenter Server 5.5  
Dynamically balance and re-balance storage load based on demands Yes – Storage IO load balancing and re-balancing is automatically handled on-demand by both SMB 3.0 Scale Out File Server and Automated Storage Tiers in Storage Spaces. Yes – Performed via Storage DRS, but limited in load-balancing frequency.  The default DRS load-balance interval only runs at 8-hour intervals and can be adjusted to run load-balancing only as often as every 1-hour. Microsoft and VMware use different approaches for storage load balancing.  Microsoft's approach is to provide granular, on-the-fly load balancing at an IO-level across SSD and HDD for better granularity.  VMware's approach is to provide storage load balancing at a VM-level and use Storage vMotion to live migrate running VM's between storage locations periodically in an attempt to distribute storage loads for running VMs.
Integrated Provisioning and Management of Shared Storage Yes - System Center 2012 R2 VMM includes storage provisioning and management of SAN Zoning, LUNS and Clustered Storage Servers.  No - Provisioning and management of Shared Storage is available through some 3rd party storage vendors who offer plug-ins to vCenter Server 5.5.  

Networking: At-a-Glance

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
Distributed Switches across Hosts Yes – Supported by Logical Switches in System Center 2012 R2 Yes  
Extensible Virtual Switches Yes - Several partners offer extensions today, such as Cisco, NEC, Inmon and 5nine. Windows Server 2012 R2 offers new support for co-existence of Network Virtualization and Switch Extensions. Replaceable, not extensible - VMware virtual switch is replaceable, not incrementally extensible with multiple 3rd party solutions concurrently  
NIC Teaming Yes – Up to 32 NICs per NIC Team. Windows Server 2012 R2 provides new Dynamic Load Balancing mode using flowlets to provide efficient load balancing even between a small number of hosts. Yes – Up to 32 NICs per Link Aggregation Group  
Private VLANs (PVLAN) Yes Yes  
ARP Spoofing Protection Yes No – Requires additional purchase of vCloud Network and Security (vCNS) or vCloud Suite.  
DHCP Snooping Protection Yes No – Requires additional purchase of vCloud Network and Security (vCNS) or vCloud Suite.  
Router Advertisement Guard Protection Yes  No – Requires additional purchase of vCloud Network and Security (vCNS) or vCloud Suite.   
Virtual Port ACLs Yes - Windows Server 2012 R2 adds support for Extended ACLs that include Protocol, Src/Dst Ports, State, Timeout & Isolation ID Yes - via new Traffic Filtering and Marking policies in vSphere 5.5 distributed switches  
Trunk Mode to VMs Yes Yes  
Port Monitoring Yes Yes  
Port Mirroring Yes Yes  
Dynamic Virtual Machine Queue Yes Yes  
IPsec Task Offload Yes No  
Single Root IO Virtualization (SR-IOV) Yes Yes – SR-IOV is supported by vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus, but without support for vMotion, Highly Available VMs or VMware FT when using SR-IOV.  
Virtual Receive Side Scaling ( Virtual RSS ) Yes Yes ( VMXNet3 )  
Network Quality of Service Yes Yes  
Network Virtualization / Software-Defined Networking (SDN) Yes – Provided via Hyper-V Network Virtualization based on NVGRE protocol and in-box Site-to-Site NVGRE Gateway. No – Requires additional purchase of VMware NSX  
Integrated Network Management of both Virtual and Physical Network components YesSystem Center 2012 R2 VMM supports integrated management of virtual networks, Top-of-Rack (ToR) switches and integrated IP Address Management No  

Guest Operating Systems: At-a-Glance

For this section, I’m defining Supported Guest Operating Systems as operating systems that are supported by both the virtualization platform vendor and by the operating system vendor.  Below, I’ve listed the latest common versions of major Windows and Linux operating systems that I've seen used in business environments of all sizes over the years, including SMB, Enterprise and hosting partner organizations.  I've included the support status for each operating system along with relevant notes where helpful.

If you’re looking for the full list of Guest Operating Systems supported by each platform, you can find the full details at the following locations:

  Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 + System Center 2012 R2 Datacenter Editions VMware vSphere 5.5 Enterprise Plus + vCenter Server 5.5 Notes
Windows Server 2012 R2 Yes Yes  
Windows 8.1 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2012 Yes Yes  
Windows 8 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2008 R2 Yes Yes  
Windows 7 with SP1 Yes Yes  
Windows 7 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2008 SP2 Yes Yes  
Windows Home Server 2011 Yes No  
Windows Small Business Server 2011 Yes No  
Windows Vista with SP2 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2003 R2 SP2 Yes Yes  
Windows Server 2003 SP2 Yes Yes  
Windows XP with SP3 Yes Yes  
Windows XP x64 with SP2 Yes Yes  
CentOS 5.7, 5.8, 6.0 – 6.4 Yes Yes  
CentOS Desktop 5.7, 5.8, 6.0 – 6.4 Yes Yes  
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.7, 5.8, 6.0 – 6.4 Yes Yes  
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Desktop 5.7, 5.8, 6.0 – 6.4 Yes Yes  
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP2 & SP3 Yes Yes  
SUS Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 SP2 & SP3 Yes Yes  
OpenSUSE 12.1 Yes Yes  
Ubuntu 12.04, 12.10, 13.10 Yes Yes – Currently 13.04 in the 13.x distros  
Ubuntu Desktop 12.04, 12.10, 13.10 Yes Yes – Currently 13.04 in the 13.x distros  
Oracle Linux 6.4 YesOracle has certified its supported products to run on Hyper-V and Windows Azure YesHowever, per this Oracle article, Oracle has not certified any of its products to run on VMware. Oracle will only provide support for issues that are either known to occur on the native OS, or can be demonstrated not to be as a result of running on VMware.  
Mac OS X 10.7.x & 10.8.x No Yes - However, see note to the right. Based on current Apple EULA, this configuration may not be legally permitted in your environment. Note that according to the Apple EULA for Mac OS X, it is not permitted to install Mac OS X on any platform that is not Apple-branded hardware. If you choose to virtualize Mac OS X on non-Apple hardware platforms, it's my understanding that you're violating the terms of the Apple EULA. 
Sun Solaris 10 No YesHowever, per this Oracle article, Oracle has not certified any of its products to run on VMware. Oracle will only provide support for issues that are either known to occur on the native OS, or can be demonstrated not to be as a result of running on VMware.  

In terms of Guest Operating System choices ... It’s somewhat of a draw in this area, as the best choice for you really depends upon which Guest Operating Systems you are actually using in your environment. 

If you are primarily using the latest past few versions of common Windows and Linux operating systems in your shop, either platform probably nicely supports your required mix of Guest Operating Systems.  However, if you’re still using older legacy versions or specialized versions of some operating systems, you may need to more closely review the full compatibility lists for each platform using the links provided above.  When evaluating Guest Operating System support for virtualization platforms, remember to also check with the Operating System vendor to ensure that the OS in question also meets their support and licensing policies.

Managing Heterogeneous Hypervisor Environments

In certain scenarios, you may find that a mix of virtualization platforms is needed to cost-effectively support all the features and Guest Operating Systems for which you’re looking, in which case you’ll be pleased to find that Microsoft System Center 2012 R2 also supports Private Cloud management across heterogeneous hypervisors, including Hyper-V, VMware vSphere and Citrix XenServer.  For more details on managing VMware vSphere and Citrix XenServer hypervisors with Microsoft System Center 2012 R2, be sure to check out the following articles:

I have taken clues from my colleague Keith's blog - https://blogs.technet.com/b/keithmayer/archive/2013/09/24/vmware-or-microsoft-comparing-vsphere-5-5-and-windows-server-2012-r2-at-a-glance.aspx#.Ut9lxHnNsiT

In Summary …

As you can see, both Microsoft and VMware Virtualization solutions offer lots of enterprise-grade virtualization features.  Hopefully this comparison was useful to you in more granularly evaluating each platform for your environment.

  • Which virtualization platform scored higher for your needs?
     
    Please share your results in the comments section below!
     
  • Are there additional features that I missed in the list above?
     
    Feel free to leave your comments below with the virtualization and Private Cloud features that you’d like to see added to this comparison.
     
  • Do you have additional specific details to add or specific corrections to suggest?
     
    Feel free to leave your suggestions below as well with a link to validate the information that you’d like to see added or updated.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    There are performance data available for Hyper-V, unfortunately I couldn't do a comparative analysis so didn't put it here. Best is to setup a lab for your relevant environment and do it :)
  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Mike, Please refer this pdf from VMware, look for the VCenter Server maximums for Live Migration limits - http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsphere5/r55/vsphere-55-configuration-maximums.pdf
  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    tonyr - Great point, this brings subjectivity. Its more from supporting no. of snapshot, that is 50. Managing snapshot is the key, if not planned well it can always be disastrous even if it is very low in number.
  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Yeah good point Finzl
  • Anonymous
    January 22, 2014
    What should be mentioned is that System Center is not really needed for small environments with just two hosts and one storage. That makes the additional cost for virtualizing a windows server environment significantly lower, in our case it was zero, since two datacenter licenses were cheaper than all servers we virtualized combined.
  • Anonymous
    January 22, 2014
    quick ? "•Use no single snapshot for more than 24-72 hours. Snapshots should not be maintained over long periods of time for application or Virtual Machine version control purposes." this is from the vmware doc linked to. Is Microsoft saying that this is as long as you have less then 50 snaps then you are good to go?
  • Anonymous
    January 24, 2014
    You wrote "Includes licensing for Enterprise Operations Monitoring and Management of hosts, guest VMs and application workloads running within VMs." but vCenter Operations Manager Foundation is free to use with vSphere
  • Anonymous
    January 24, 2014
    I didn't know that System Center 2012 R2 VMM is free of charge
  • Anonymous
    January 24, 2014
    You wrote "Manage GPU Virtualization for Advanced VDI Graphics" in a VMware Environment using vDGA and vSGA needs a Horizon View License thats not correct.
  • Anonymous
    January 24, 2014
    You wrote Live Migration of running VMs in a VMware Environment is limited to 4 VMs with 1 GEth and... thats not correct.
  • Anonymous
    January 31, 2014
    Well researched & captured the data! i like the way you collected details in depth. is there any way to come up with performance data with this two different hypervisor?
  • Anonymous
    March 06, 2014
    Nice, very nice and informative!
  • Anonymous
    April 04, 2014
    Much Appreciated and very very useful information for sysadmins under a single roof....
  • Anonymous
    June 03, 2014
    Nice reference point if someone is only looking for feature comparison. However, I have to mention that your article does paint Hyper-V as a substantially better product than it actually is!
  • Anonymous
    June 11, 2014
    Comparing vSphere 5.5 to WS12+MSSS isn't really a comparison. Regularly invoking features that must be purchased with vSphere while saying they are included with the MS solution is pointless. vCloud Suite would be more appropriate comparison to WS12+MSSS, in which the results are significantly different. VMWare is more expensive for a reason.
  • Anonymous
    June 22, 2014
    The comment has been removed
  • Anonymous
    August 29, 2014
    A more objective comparison can be found here:

    http://www.virtualizationmatrix.com/matrix.php?category_search=all&free_based=1
  • Anonymous
    October 22, 2015
    i think this writer gets pay to pump microchun hyper-v.
  • Anonymous
    March 27, 2016
    Thank you for this great comparison! Your readers may also find this comparison between Microsoft Hyper-V and vSphere on IT Central Station to be helpful:https://goo.gl/t3JEkH

    Users interested in these solutions also read reviews for Oracle VM. This user writes, "It's much cheaper than paying millions for Oracle DB in VMware. Support for Oracle VM and Oracle Linux are included when installed on Oracle hardware, which makes it a very cheap option." You can access the full review here: https://goo.gl/YZbd0p