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agarjogger posted:My hackintosh laptop can't see its WLAN or WWAN cards. Could a Windows virtual machine see them and share access with the host Mac if connection sharing was supported? Can virtualization give my host computer vicarious access to hardware it otherwise wouldn't have, or do I not understand virtualization? Or does a VM have no access whatsoever to actual hardware. There are instances where the guest can have direct access to io hardware running on the host by means of vmdirectpath, but things like network devices are typically abstracted by the hypervisor. In your case I don't think virtualization will help. Someone with more knowledge feel free to correct me. some kinda jackal fucked around with this message at 00:02 on Aug 28, 2013 |
# ? Aug 28, 2013 00:00 |
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# ? May 8, 2024 17:13 |
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I rolled out vCOps today, it took about 3 hours start to finish. This included reading the installation and user guide. I also ponied up and took/passed that new VCA cert test for data center virtualization. It took considerably less time.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 05:54 |
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warning posted:I rolled out vCOps today, it took about 3 hours start to finish. This included reading the installation and user guide.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 06:25 |
Martytoof posted:There are instances where the guest can have direct access to io hardware running on the host by means of vmdirectpath, but things like network devices are typically abstracted by the hypervisor. In your case I don't think virtualization will help. Someone with more knowledge feel free to correct me. Not surprising, thanks for the answer. It seems that OSX could probably be beaten into using my PCI wwan card after all, since it comes with support for a bunch of devices already including ones by my vendor ID (Sierra Wireless).
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 15:11 |
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SquadronROE posted:So it looks like in addition to my DBA and Coder hats, I'm rapidly sizing a system administrator hat for fitting. Part of this is trying to figure out how best to handle part-time virtualization of our performance test lab. Got any system monitoring for system load and reports?
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 15:34 |
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warning posted:I also ponied up and took/passed that new VCA cert test for data center virtualization. It took considerably less time.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 18:08 |
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Serfer posted:Pfft, I thought this test was free. I'm not going to pay $120 for something so easy. Is it online or do you have to drag yourself to a testing center?
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 19:06 |
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Moey posted:Is it online or do you have to drag yourself to a testing center? It's online, so it's at least got that going for it.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 19:25 |
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Quick question: is CapacityIQ still a separate free product or has it been completely rolled into Ops Manger?
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 19:43 |
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cheese-cube posted:Quick question: is CapacityIQ still a separate free product or has it been completely rolled into Ops Manger? Are you talking about Capacity PLanner?
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 20:02 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:Are you talking about Capacity PLanner? I'm not sure really. Honestly it was a while ago that I messed around with CapacityIQ. It was available as a free VPX which you just deploy in your environment and then hook up to your vCenter server. You could run growth simulations on your current environment to predict when resource shortfalls would occur. Also it had pretty graphs which everyone loves (I know I do). The first result on Google for CapacityIQ leads to a 404 however if you view the cached version it says that the features in CapacityIQ were rolled into vCenter Operations Management Suite and that CapacityIQ was subsequently forced into EOL. Edit: bloody auto-URL parsing...
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 20:29 |
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Serfer posted:Pfft, I thought this test was free. I'm not going to pay $120 for something so easy. Couple hours ago, I went through the free training for this. And by training, I mean "basically a three-hour VMware ad with no content whatsoever". Since I have no VMware certs, and don't have the time/resources to get a VCP right now, I might get this to have something that looks good on a resume. Should be dead-simple to pass the exam even with almost no hands-on VMware experience, and the price is right. I'm under no allusions that it's actually worth a drat, though.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 21:39 |
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cheese-cube posted:I'm not sure really. Honestly it was a while ago that I messed around with CapacityIQ. It was available as a free VPX which you just deploy in your environment and then hook up to your vCenter server. You could run growth simulations on your current environment to predict when resource shortfalls would occur. Also it had pretty graphs which everyone loves (I know I do). Vcops will let you run 'what if' scenarios that sound like it may be what you are after?
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 22:17 |
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Yeah I think you are looking for vCenter Operations Manager
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 22:34 |
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Weird Uncle Dave posted:Couple hours ago, I went through the free training for this. And by training, I mean "basically a three-hour VMware ad with no content whatsoever". I found it a little bit useful in terms of sorting out the hundreds of terms that are used to explain various things, it's all stuff I knew from having used the product but there are worse ways to prove you have a slight clue of what you're talking about. I'm in the same position re:VCP so I'm hoping I can throw this on a resume and end up working somewhere that sees the point in training people. I definitely don't regard it as anything to shout about though.
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# ? Aug 28, 2013 22:43 |
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I have no idea why, but I just logged into Pearson, and during the checkout process this showed up:quote:Discount: -60.00 Encourage people to take VCA exam during 2013
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 01:45 |
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Gah sometimes I hate the area I live in Hey wanna study some new VMware, stuff? nah too busy Don't know if it is my age or poo poo but holy gently caress why does no one want to sperg over net/storage/virtualization as I do? I only know like one guy how does, but poo poo how are there not more? Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 01:51 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 01:48 |
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IT is hard and most people find it incredibly dull or too nerdy. Yet it's vital to almost every single company. In many ways this is a blessing, since now you can draw a very comfortable salary at like 24 years old by being one of the relative few who care to learn about it
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 02:16 |
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Docjowles posted:IT is hard and most people find it incredibly dull or too nerdy. Yet it's vital to almost every single company. In many ways this is a blessing, since now you can draw a very comfortable salary at like 24 years old by being one of the relative few who care to learn about it Sometimes I want to scream and rip my grey hair out telling people vm/network/storage layer protocol. E: Also this avatar is growing on me, I can't bring myself to change it from Princess Luna, she is just so hhhnnngg.... gently caress Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 03:35 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 03:33 |
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Move to the bay area. You will quickly get sick of people talking tech. You can't sit in a coffee shop in Mountain View without hearing 5 different conversations about how great the project at Google is, or how their social start-up is going to change the world. It might even lead you to take up following a sports team, just so you have something else to talk about.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 03:49 |
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DevNull posted:Move to the bay area. You will quickly get sick of people talking tech. Never; why would someone grow bored of learning Technology? I wouldn't mind the ba area but I would need a good offer Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 04:05 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 03:56 |
It sucks so much because they're barely even talking tech, they're 'talking shop' just like pricks on the subway. They're talking about their money and people who are getting in the way of it. It's banned in many places including some cars on my commuter train because it's awful to listen to. Salvos of bullshit have splash damage, and there is nothing more bullshit-laced than the confluence of tech and business. Blame venture capital and Ayn Rand for sucking the life out of it all, I guess.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 04:05 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:Never; why would someone grow bored of learning Technology? Because at some point you get tired of all the "experts" you run into that don't know squat, yet they get promoted or they are the ones who determine what and how you will implement stuff. Being forced to learn certain technologies that you know are a waste of time, but somebody just has to get something done for their review. It's called be jaded and pessimistic, one reason I love my job now, because I can control what technology I want to learn and what I want to deal with.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 04:05 |
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DragonReach posted:Because at some point you get tired of all the "experts" you run into that don't know squat, yet they get promoted or they are the ones who determine what and how you will implement stuff. Being forced to learn certain technologies that you know are a waste of time, but somebody just has to get something done for their review. I don't understand this. Why would you not want to learn new tech? Seriously I would love to learn all my poo poo to be VCDX by 26 and poo poo, it would be cool to me. Sorry I just do not understand why people would quit technology/learinging/augmentation...
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 04:10 |
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Can anyone recommend any primer reading or best practices doco for ESX to HyperV migration? We are looking at migrating our little 2 node cluster remote sites to HyperV to save a bundle on licensing, and since they only run basic file & print it's not considered a high risk. I'm most interested in the networking components such as splitting management from vm traffic, links for clustering & live migration, iSCSI, NIC teaming (using either microsoft teaming, or the intel utility) etc. GrandMaster fucked around with this message at 06:16 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 06:03 |
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agarjogger posted:It sucks so much because they're barely even talking tech, they're 'talking shop' just like pricks on the subway. They're talking about their money and people who are getting in the way of it. It's banned in many places including some cars on my commuter train because it's awful to listen to. Salvos of bullshit have splash damage, and there is nothing more bullshit-laced than the confluence of tech and business. Blame venture capital and Ayn Rand for sucking the life out of it all, I guess. Some days I can't even stand to read the front page of Hacker News due to all the
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 06:22 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:I don't understand this. Why would you not want to learn new tech? Seriously I would love to learn all my poo poo to be VCDX by 26 and poo poo, it would be cool to me. One example I could think of though, you want to get a VCDX cert, so VMware, what if your boss came in and told you had to now flip over to Hyper-v or Xen instead? Understanding it isn't really easy, but put simply it can be just plain old "burn out". There are plenty of things I think are cool and I love to learn, but not always the same subjects I did in the past. Another aspect, there are a ton of people in IT who only did it to make money, they don't have any real drive or passion for the tech. It's a paycheck to them. DragonReach Ghost fucked around with this message at 07:30 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 07:22 |
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GrandMaster posted:Can anyone recommend any primer reading or best practices doco for ESX to HyperV migration? There are a ton of TechNet links on most of those topics, PM me with specfics if you can and I can help out a bit. One that is a starting point http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831829.aspx *Disclaimer (I work for MS and am biased)
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 07:27 |
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three posted:
I'd say if you have the license for it you should be using a dvSwitch for your VM traffic. It doesn't really add complexity and it's going to make life easier down the road.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 07:33 |
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1000101 posted:I'd say if you have the license for it you should be using a dvSwitch for your VM traffic. It doesn't really add complexity and it's going to make life easier down the road. It raises vCenter from a non-important management server to a critical service. Have problems with standard vSwitch and break things? Easy to fix. Have problems with dvSwitch and break things? Good luck if you're a novice. They're making progress with later versions (e.g. 5.1+) with its auto-fixing behavior, but it's still more complex.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 14:20 |
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three posted:It raises vCenter from a non-important management server to a critical service. Have problems with standard vSwitch and break things? Easy to fix. Have problems with dvSwitch and break things? Good luck if you're a novice. This is sort of the thought we had when we deployed our vsphere environment. We licensed the dvswitch but we kept asking ourselves what exactly we needed it for and no one could come up with a good answer. So we left it out
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 14:45 |
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three posted:It raises vCenter from a non-important management server to a critical service. Have problems with standard vSwitch and break things? Easy to fix. Have problems with dvSwitch and break things? Good luck if you're a novice. We went down this road before. We're still on 5.0. We had vCenter crap out when it was sitting on a dvSwitch once. To fix it we ended up having to do some command line fuckery to create a vSwitch, move vCenter over to it. We left vCenter on the vSwitch when we got it back up and plan on keeping it there.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 14:48 |
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Weird Uncle Dave posted:I have no idea why, but I just logged into Pearson, and during the checkout process this showed up: As a note I got this line item too. Yay for cheap (and inexpensive) certs!
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 15:51 |
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dvSwitches for everything except management is the way to go afaic.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 16:55 |
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Hey guys remember when I said vCloud Director didn't have a bright future? VMware splits vCloud Director into vCenter, vCloud Automation Center
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 19:15 |
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evil_bunnY posted:dvSwitches for everything except management is the way to go afaic. Eh, I still keep IP storage on VSS. three posted:Hey guys remember when I said vCloud Director didn't have a bright future? Yeah vcloud is going to go through a good amount of changes, so is vSphere and View, and a bunch of the other VM products. Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 19:24 on Aug 29, 2013 |
# ? Aug 29, 2013 19:15 |
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three posted:It raises vCenter from a non-important management server to a critical service. Have problems with standard vSwitch and break things? Easy to fix. Have problems with dvSwitch and break things? Good luck if you're a novice. You could shut down your vcenter server for a week if you wanted to and not have to worry about loss of network until a host dies or you want to make a change like creating a virtual machine. That said there is no such thing as a non-important management server. All of your monitoring ends up going through vcenter server anyway and it should be treated about the same as any other tool you depend on to keep your environment running. Customers/end users may not see it but operations people certainly will. I end up gaining better link utilization (LBT is great for novice admins) and I gain per switchport policies (much better for security and overall management), persistent port tracking, netflow and SPAN support. I can still use a standard switch for vmkernel/vcenter/major dependencies or I can use ephemeral binding with a vDS for things like VC, SQL and AD and not worry. Either way it's a small amount of additional complexity for getting much better visibility into the network. re: the vCloud stuff, anyone with developers in-house has a number of reasons to look at vCloud/openstack/AWS. Conceptually the whole self service/completely arbitrary infrastructure is the bit that has a bright future.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 20:14 |
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1000101 posted:That said there is no such thing as a non-important management server. All of your monitoring ends up going through vcenter server anyway and it should be treated about the same as any other tool you depend on to keep your environment running. Customers/end users may not see it but operations people certainly will. I presume you run vCenter Heartbeat in all of your environments then? If not, clearly you don't consider it important. 1000101 posted:I end up gaining better link utilization (LBT is great for novice admins) and I gain per switchport policies (much better for security and overall management), persistent port tracking, netflow and SPAN support. I can still use a standard switch for vmkernel/vcenter/major dependencies or I can use ephemeral binding with a vDS for things like VC, SQL and AD and not worry. Either way it's a small amount of additional complexity for getting much better visibility into the network. three posted:I don't even think most companies should use the dvSwitch unless there is a feature they require.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 20:58 |
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three posted:I presume you run vCenter Heartbeat in all of your environments then? If not, clearly you don't consider it important. Heartbeat, SQL clustering and some automated way of rebuilding vCenter from scratch in under an hour if for whatever reason it dies. All of your VMware monitoring ends up in vcenter server? Why not treat it as a fairly important system? My personal environment I just use HA with ephemeral port-binding (for vCenter, 1 AD server and my database server) and I can rebuild vCenter from scratch in ~15 minutes but so far it's had less than 10 minutes of vcenter outages in the last 12 months. All of my management vmk interfaces are on a standard switch but every virtual machine sits on the vDS. That said if your vCenter server is down the only things it impacts during that are creating VMs and being able to vmotion things. You can't really create a VM without vCenter server anyway so it doesn't matter that vCenter is unavailable to deal with assigning a static port binding. quote:I don't even think most companies should use the dvSwitch unless there is a feature they require. Even when I had ~15 virtual machines I still needed visibility into network traffic and some relatively sane means of distributing my VM traffic over multiple links (preferably over multiple physical switches.) Exporting netflow data and being able to wireshark network traffic is tremendously helpful in troubleshooting those "oh it must be VMware" issues that pop up non-stop even today. Load based teaming is about as simple as you can get and would work with everything from a dlink switch to a nexus 7k without having to depend on configuring port-channels or deal with hashing algorithms. Essentially the vDS has more positives than negatives as your environment grows and it's worth spending the time to understand how it works.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 21:19 |
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# ? May 8, 2024 17:13 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:Gah sometimes I hate the area I live in You're young and eager and really into this stuff and there is nothing wrong with that. You're experiencing a period of hyper learning/growth professionally. I did something similar years ago before I got married and had kids. I spent 14 hours a day at work instead of going home to my apartment and was absorbing information at a incredible clip. Right now though I'm at the point where personally my job usually stops when I leave the building and any time I have outside normal working hours is spent with the family or doing things not related to my job. Just the stage of life I'm at right now. Once the kids are in school I'll have more time for work stuff but I'm not missing these early years of their lives.
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# ? Aug 29, 2013 22:02 |