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Personally I don't even care too much if the feature actually works - I don't need it badly enough to request the feature be fixed. I'm more put-off that the ability to edit a hard disk during template deployment has been there for 4+ years, broken the whole time. Moreover, it's broken in a way that isn't immediately obvious, is ugly to fix and/or requires a call to support to have them un-gently caress your template and VM. At this point I'd be happy if they just let you edit memory/vCPU/cores, since that stuff seems to work fine, and just removed the hard disk piece. Leaving flaky, buggy features in like that is just not what I think most people expect from VMware. edit: got another reply from support saying they sourced a recent, active Problem Report and a fix is expected in v5.0 U2 of the vSphere client - alternatively it might work properly already in the vCenter web UI. Mierdaan fucked around with this message at 15:22 on May 24, 2012 |
# ? May 24, 2012 13:00 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 18:09 |
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Yeah, those are good points. And sorry for the thread-jacking, everyone.
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# ? May 24, 2012 15:22 |
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http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V49JGW...KK85G6ZTGTH9ENP THE HA and DRS yellow book is FREE, best get it before they run out. Yes it is for 4.1 but still a good book
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# ? May 24, 2012 23:54 |
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By Epping? Yeah, better get it.
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# ? May 24, 2012 23:58 |
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Would anyone care, or would want me to post up some similar projects that I deal with at work? Just so people who don't have too much VM experience can see the things that come up day-to-day? Sorta like simlabs, but just real world scenarios of if you got a job as a vmware engineer/admin what you might see.
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# ? May 25, 2012 04:07 |
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^^^^ I'd be interested.
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# ? May 25, 2012 04:19 |
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Corvettefisher posted:http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V49JGW...KK85G6ZTGTH9ENP Awesome. Thanks.
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# ? May 25, 2012 05:24 |
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I recently got a promotion and am now in charge of the entire infrastructure at work. We're a pretty much 100% Microsoft shop, so we have a pretty comprehensive Hyper-V system in place. It is also now my problem any time poo poo hits any sort of rotating device. Having drunk deep from the Hyper-V keg of Flavor-aid, I've recently rolled my own rackmount VM host in order to gently caress with all of that Hyper-V poo poo without ending up taking down production poo poo that may or may not cost me my job. Time to see how big a clusterfuck of a microsoft network I can piece together with 64gb of memory and a 3930K. Also, unrelated to virtualization, but the Systemcenter series of products are the sweetest loving thing ever once you get them configured and know what you're doing. One actual question: What do you guys do for an offsite disaster recovery site? We're looking at setting one up for business continuity in the case of fire/earthquake/volcanic implosion, and aside from setting up a DFS replication group and using DPM to Disk to Disk system state backup all our VMs, I can't think of what else we'd need to do.
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# ? May 25, 2012 07:52 |
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Corvettefisher posted:Would anyone care, or would want me to post up some similar projects that I deal with at work? Just so people who don't have too much VM experience can see the things that come up day-to-day? Sorta like simlabs, but just real world scenarios of if you got a job as a vmware engineer/admin what you might see. I kid, I kid. Sounds good. In other news, the entire central virtual infrastructure at our uni just poo poo the bed. This happened 4 hours ago, and they're still not up. These are the people who got mad when I told them "thanks but no thanks, I'll roll my own" not so long ago. Methylethylaldehyde posted:One actual question: What do you guys do for an offsite disaster recovery site? We're looking at setting one up for business continuity in the case of fire/earthquake/volcanic implosion, and aside from setting up a DFS replication group and using DPM to Disk to Disk system state backup all our VMs, I can't think of what else we'd need to do. Test the poo poo out of your DR plan. Don't cheat (you don't get to touch anything on the protected site once the test starts. Hope you printed your plan and passwords). evil_bunnY fucked around with this message at 11:08 on May 25, 2012 |
# ? May 25, 2012 11:00 |
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Methylethylaldehyde posted:One actual question: What do you guys do for an offsite disaster recovery site? We're looking at setting one up for business continuity in the case of fire/earthquake/volcanic implosion, and aside from setting up a DFS replication group and using DPM to Disk to Disk system state backup all our VMs, I can't think of what else we'd need to do. I'm actually really looking forward to Windows Server 2012 and Hyper-V v3 for this, because I plan to use Hyper-V Replica for off-site disaster recovery, in addition to file-level backups of the VM contents. Here's a good write up on it: http://www.aidanfinn.com/?p=12147
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# ? May 25, 2012 15:59 |
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If you have $77,000 and a good relationship with EMC, you can implement off-site vMotion. There's your disaster planning!
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# ? May 25, 2012 16:06 |
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Some stuff like Exchange and SQL can be better to replicate at the application level, but yeah, most of our stuff is all SAN-level replication with a few virtual hosts on the other side.
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# ? May 25, 2012 16:48 |
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After trying to install Windows Server 2008 R2 on an ESXi box (and causing it to crash horribly) my roommate suggested that I instead use VMware Player to create the virtual machine, then use VMware vCenter Converter to transfer it to ESXi. Worked flawlessly. We're still not sure why the box would crash whenever I tried installing Windows Server 2008 R2, but at least I've finally got my VMs setup and can now work with them while gaining some experience working with a VMware product.
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# ? May 25, 2012 22:42 |
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I'd be more interested in troubleshooting that than working around it, to be honest. That's home lab, right there. If you're not troubleshooting it, you're just building a VM you've got no use for. My own lab is having a 2 for 1 sale on iSCSI paths today, so that's pretty exciting. I had one storage port routed to one vmnic, which gave me 1 path. I then added another storage port and another vmnic, disabled teaming, and associated each port with its own vmnic and that gives me... 3 paths! On 2 ports and 2 vmnics, I have 3 paths. Huzzah, I say. The third path is to a bottle of aged 12 year Chivas Regal, I am sure. e: 3 paths on 2 ports, wuheva, wuheva, I do what I want! MC Fruit Stripe fucked around with this message at 01:27 on May 26, 2012 |
# ? May 26, 2012 01:21 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:I'd be more interested in troubleshooting that than working around it, to be honest. That's home lab, right there. If you're not troubleshooting it, you're just building a VM you've got no use for. Just realize you still have a SPoF but learning the fundamentals of multipathing is a good skill to have keep it up E: posting actual projects a vmware engineer has tomorrow keep an eye out
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# ? May 26, 2012 01:44 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:I'd be more interested in troubleshooting that than working around it, to be honest. That's home lab, right there. If you're not troubleshooting it, you're just building a VM you've got no use for. Believe me I'd love to, but the box runs my roommate's Linux file server, controls the media server, firewall, and access to the internet. He tested the hardware and couldn't find any problems, and when I tried to install Windows Server 2008 R2 again it crashed the box. At that point we sort of threw up our hands and went the alternate route since nothing else we installed had any issues. At this point we've got 2 Windows 2008 R2 servers, a Smoothwall server, a Minecraft server, a Linux fileserver and another Linux system running on the ESXi box. Only 15% of the RAM is in use, and the cpu is holding steady at 20% utilization, and other than my Windows Server installation attempts, the box has been rock solid.
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# ? May 26, 2012 03:31 |
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do ya'll want some break scripts?
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# ? May 26, 2012 03:36 |
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Oh you meant it crashed the whole box, not the VM, eep, yeah I feel ya What's the least painful way to enable or fake CPU virtualization in a nested VM? I've got it enabled in the BIOS, but there's Google-confirmed issues with it translating from BIOS -> Workstation -> ESXi -> 64-bit OS, and ESXi is pitching a giant fit about my installing a 64-bit OS. And I mean, it won't even let me.
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# ? May 26, 2012 03:38 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:Oh you meant it crashed the whole box, not the VM, eep, yeah I feel ya download workstation 2012 https://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sugexp=chrome,mod=10&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=workstation+2012 then virtualize intel-vt or amd-v
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# ? May 26, 2012 03:40 |
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Sorry, it needs to work in Workstation 8 - I'll keep googling ------- Got it, on each ESXi host, go to settings, hardware tab, processors, and under virtualization engine click "virtualize intel vt-x/ept" MC Fruit Stripe fucked around with this message at 07:02 on May 26, 2012 |
# ? May 26, 2012 05:28 |
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Corvettefisher posted:do ya'll want some break scripts?
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# ? May 28, 2012 00:49 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:Why yes, we do! K, I'll write some powercli to build an environment first otherwise some of my scripts might not work Anyone here use Virtual Distributed switches for anything other than VM network traffic management? Normally I let the physical box have it's own vmkernel for iscsi, vmotion, and only do VM net traffic through the VD switch but I am seeing a good number of boxes routing everything but management via VD switch. I am trying to find the best practices for VD switch so I can see how wrong/right I am doing things. Even in my VCAP-DCA class we left the iscsi/vmotion vmkernel on the esxi host then did VM traffic via VDS
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# ? May 28, 2012 01:38 |
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We run everything except management off of a dvswitch.
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# ? May 28, 2012 02:39 |
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If I'm using 10gbe then I'll use the vDS and NIOC to manage traffic since I'm sharing the two 10 gig uplinks among all my different traffic. This of course assumes I'm not using something that lets me carve that 10 gig NIC into virtual NICs. If I am then I just create a pair of NICs for management traffic and if applicable storage to put on standard vSwitches.
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# ? May 28, 2012 02:41 |
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MC Fruit Stripe fucked around with this message at 03:10 on Mar 30, 2013 |
# ? May 28, 2012 03:26 |
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Dude, gently caress Joffrey. (I hope that's not an important VM or anything. HATE)
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# ? May 28, 2012 04:47 |
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It's a domain controller, because he controls the domain, god
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# ? May 28, 2012 05:21 |
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Sometimes I think I'm the only one who considers formulaic, purpose-driven hostnames sexier than anything form popular culture
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# ? May 28, 2012 06:09 |
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Martytoof posted:Sometimes I think I'm the only one who considers formulaic, purpose-driven hostnames sexier than anything form popular culture No, I do too. Pop-reference junk might be funny for a year until you no longer care about the reference, but a good name will be meaningful long after you're gone. Of course if it's a home network, go nuts, but that goes without saying
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# ? May 28, 2012 09:03 |
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here is a demo of stuff I see day to day This isn't all you do, but I left 4 of the major objectives for you all to come up with. E: goons inc. has 3 backbone 24port gig switches with 20 ports open across all 3 switches
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# ? May 28, 2012 19:08 |
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Corvettefisher posted:here is a demo of stuff I see day to day You find new storage solutions and do hardware acquisitions day-to-day? It's clear you're very excited about virtualization, but I think you need to step back and re-assess where you think you are at a skill level, especially in regards to the advice you give.
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# ? May 28, 2012 20:38 |
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A step in the right direction would be correcting the errors in the OP
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# ? May 28, 2012 20:43 |
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I am not quite as anti, but dude just understand that is the kind of question someone spends a month on the phone with vendors and gets paid a lot to do so. I thought you were gonna ask like, hey vmotion isn't working what are the first three things you check. You are basically trying to ask us to design your storage solution.
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# ? May 28, 2012 22:59 |
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three posted:It's clear you're very excited about virtualization, but I think you need to step back and re-assess where you think you are at a skill level, especially in regards to the advice you give. No kidding. This is a project you take months to plan and test. I hope this isn't a "once a day ordeal" or there are going to be some really pissed off people out there. Rule #1 of Consulting: Everyone Lies It's going to take you a while to figure out what they really want
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# ? May 29, 2012 01:33 |
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Syano posted:A step in the right direction would be correcting the errors in the OP Seconding this. A simple cleanup would be a good start.
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# ? May 29, 2012 14:53 |
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Why shouldn't I migrate from vSwitches to dvSwitch? What shouldn't be moved to vSwitch Currently I have 3 vSwitches per ESXi: one for management traffic and vMotion, one for VM "production" traffic and one for iSCSI (VMs don't see iSCSI, they only see datastores). Each vSwitch is teamed to 2 NICs. I've got 4 ESXis currently in the same cluster, all with Enterprise+ licenses connected to vCenter.
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# ? Jun 1, 2012 09:23 |
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If you've got Enterprise+, there's really no good reason I know of not to use dvSwitches for VM traffic. They offer some nice features outside of the ease-of-management (e.g. port mirroring, netflow, bidirectional traffic shaping). Some people are paranoid about putting any management traffic on a dvSwitch, since you can't manage a dvSwitch if vCenter takes a poo poo.
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# ? Jun 1, 2012 14:39 |
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Double-post ahoy! If you have a host running ESXi 4.1 embedded with the image from Dell, can you upgrade to 5.0 using VUM with the standard VMware repos?
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# ? Jun 1, 2012 16:07 |
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I will warn you: if your MSSQL database goes tits up you can expect some interesting things on your dvSwitches such as entire VLANs that just stop passing traffic making the VMs using them go off the grid. Everything will return to normal once you get MSSQL back on its legs. This is something we've experienced that the VMWare engineers said is "impossible"
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# ? Jun 1, 2012 16:12 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 18:09 |
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Mierdaan posted:Double-post ahoy! If you have a host running ESXi 4.1 embedded with the image from Dell, can you upgrade to 5.0 using VUM with the standard VMware repos? Yes, but you lose the OpenManage capability.
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# ? Jun 1, 2012 16:13 |