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A third vote of confidence for PHD Virtual. We use it at a few dozen clients, and we've been partners with them since their esXpress days. If you can't do SAN-level backups, then PHD Virtual is really the best game in town.
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# ¿ Jan 25, 2013 15:49 |
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# ¿ May 12, 2024 02:34 |
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Just make sure that vSwitch0 is allowing promiscuous traffic (under the security tab - default is Reject).
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# ¿ Jan 30, 2013 17:27 |
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IOwnCalculus posted:Out of curiosity - what's the reasoning for this? I'm using a network configuration that looks effectively identical and I've never enabled promiscuous mode, yet it has no problems that I've encountered. Promiscuous mode allows the VM to listen for all traffic on the vSwitch, including traffic not destined for it. It's a two-part process: you have to mark it as 'Accept' on the vSwitch security, and the guest has to put the NIC into promiscuous mode. I thought this had something to do with using multiple MAC addresses and firewalls doing VIP/MIP/port-forwarding, since I always have to turn it on when using virtual firewalls. madsushi fucked around with this message at 18:03 on Jan 30, 2013 |
# ¿ Jan 30, 2013 17:58 |
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:Is there an easy way to check the block deltas for individual VMDKs or VMs on vSphere 4.1? Our storage guy is getting mad at me because our OS partition volume is generating a change delta (not growth) of 20% out of 850gb of deduped data every week or so and its annoying to replicate. He thinks it is being caused by the OS page files, but I an extremely suspicious of this because unless there is a huge amount of memory pressure causing hard faults the OS page file shouldn't be getting used much. Admittedly, our Exchange 2007 server isn't configured well and hard faults a lot because too much is being allocated to the store.exe process but that is getting fixed. And even with that in a worst-case it could only account for maybe 1/10 of the delta we are seeing. Someone gave me this same advice: turn on CBT (changed block tracking) for the suspect VMs, wait 24 hours, and then look at the size of the CBT files to see which VMs changed the most.
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# ¿ Feb 6, 2013 17:34 |
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Syano posted:Even if requisite infrastructure wasn't in play I bet you could still do it for a 3rd of that budget. Basic SMB virtualization is cheap as balls now. A Dell MD3200i fully pop'ed with 1TB disks, a pair of Cisco 2960s and 3 hosts, along with licensing should cost about 50 grand, give or take, these days. And it should be powerful enough to run any number of servers that an SMB should need. Even if your environment pushes some badass IOPs or has some sort of massive memory requirements you should be able to put together a crème de la crème environment for just around 6 figures. For hardware, sure, but you forgot to include the $200k that they'll be paying a consultant to put it in.
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# ¿ Mar 16, 2013 20:31 |
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Corvettefisher posted:It's honestly pretty straight forward so long as you don't select simple install. Also put SSO in multi-site even if you are currently one site, there is no easy way to change it after you finish it out. Yeah, as long as you don't choose the wizard (which should be the safest). And as long as you choose multi-site (without being warned that you can't change later). And as long as you don't change your RAM/CPU count after installing (or you'll break the Java thumbprint). And as long as your password doesn't have a ! or \ or other character in it (since it passes the password via the command line). The 5.1 upgrade process sucks hard unless you've been through it and figured out all the "gotchas". Enterprise-grade software should not be this difficult to install/upgrade. VMware messed up. Your software shouldn't have "traps" set up that people can fall into.
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# ¿ Apr 5, 2013 16:58 |
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16 under-powered CPUs and 128GB of RAM per U is not high-density, so it's clearly a power play (no hockey pun intended). If it's 45-blades-per-4.3U, that's an even lower density. - 11 CPUs / 88GB of RAM per U. madsushi fucked around with this message at 06:52 on Apr 10, 2013 |
# ¿ Apr 10, 2013 06:47 |
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Moey posted:This. We can all be VMware course buddies!
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# ¿ Apr 11, 2013 18:07 |
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:Our storage guy is reading some NetApp documentation that having our NFS volumes update the file last read access timestamps causes a performance hit and we would be better off without it. I'm concerned that the last read timestamp is somehow being used by the lock files and that making this change may cause that file locking to break and things to randomly start unmounting, but I can't find good documentation about how exactly VMware is handling the locking on NFS volumes besides references to a hidden .lck file. Does anyone have thoughts? no_atime_update is a NetApp best practice for VMware and is automatically set if you create your datastores with the NetApp plugin for VMware (VSC - Virtual Storage Console). Will not cause any issues.
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# ¿ Apr 26, 2013 22:06 |
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Moey posted:Host running standard. MPIO will ensure that you get an even distribution across all 4 of your links, while teaming might give you a bad split depending on your hashing algo. MPIO is worth it, in my opinion, since it's mostly set/forget. Also, it sets you up for the future when you might get access to another switch or a 10Gb switch, etc.
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# ¿ May 1, 2013 07:24 |
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demonachizer posted:Are any of you running ESXi 5.1 on proliant servers? I am trying to install the Management Bundle and it is coming up with valid products of embeddedEsx 5.0.0 and 5.1.0. I am not running Embedded but I am hoping that there is some way to use update manager to deploy these tools anyway. I can't for the life of me find anything about this problem anywhere. I run ESXi 5.1 on quite a few DL360s and DL380s (and blades). Typically I forget trying to install the management agents manually and just reinstall ESXi via the HP-branded ISO, which is now available directly from VMware. https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/details?productId=285&downloadGroup=HP-ESXI-5.1.0-GA-10SEP2012
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# ¿ Jun 12, 2013 20:33 |
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fougera posted:It seems fair to say that there's no clear winner at this point and there's a lot of land grab to be had by Citrix or VM. No, VMware has won the hypervisor battle, and has owned the market for some time. XenDesktop has is winning the VDI battle, but it's not a blowout. The difference is that VMware is actively pushing View and wants to see their VDI market share expand, while XenServer is probably a loss-leader for Citrix to get their XenApp/Desktop in the door. They'd rather see XA/XD on ESXi than lose a sale by forcing the issue. VMware, on the other hand, doesn't want their stuff running on anything but VMware (in their ideal world). XenServer is Citrix' play to make their XA/XD solution cheaper/easier.
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# ¿ Jun 19, 2013 07:15 |
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XenServer and XenCenter are both being open-sourced and are completely free, as of today: http://blog.xen.org/index.php/2013/06/25/xenserver-org-and-the-xen-project/ Looks like Citrix' strategy to use XenServer as a loss-leader for XenDesktop is definitive, now. Here's a great FAQ on the changes: http://xenserver.org/discuss-virtualization/q-and-a/categories/listings/xenserver-org-launch.html
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# ¿ Jun 26, 2013 00:42 |
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There's also now a lower-level VMWare cert (VCA) that you can take without having to go to any classes. http://mylearn.vmware.com/mgrReg/plan.cfm?plan=41162&ui=www_cert Although it is yet to be seen if the VCA is actually valuable or not.
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# ¿ Aug 26, 2013 18:56 |
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ghostinmyshell posted:Okay guys you are being too positive here. Please remember that vSAN is still in beta (per VMWare) so it's not exactly "production-ready" just yet.
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# ¿ Aug 26, 2013 20:17 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:Scan's and vShield re-scanning every file in the datastores, it effectively was DDOS'ing its data storage to oblivion. Your storage vendor will tell you that you just need to buy their latest SAN to soak up all of those pesky IOPS!
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# ¿ Sep 25, 2013 16:46 |
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FISHMANPET posted:I just got a call from Stanly Community College, they're offering another class, and you have to register by tomorrow. So check your spam filters and don't automatically ignore a phone call from the 704 area code. Ditto, just signed up via the form (that was marked as spam).
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# ¿ Oct 1, 2013 22:06 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:I am still surprised every day by how many "vmware engineers" still will not virtualize vcenter, or do not know how to recover from an environment down issue with a virtual vcenter. It started with people not wanting to virtualize SQL servers, then not wanting to virtualize domain controllers. Virtualizing vCenter will be the last domino to topple.
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# ¿ Oct 8, 2013 22:28 |
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Any of you guys able to log into Moodle for the Stanley class?
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# ¿ Oct 21, 2013 23:05 |
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Daylen Drazzi posted:I logged into the Stanly website a couple weeks ago and at first couldn't figure out why I was having problems logging in, but then I remembered that I'd reset my password. All good at this time - finished up the first section and planning on knocking out the second tomorrow after work. This is all I get after logging in: http://i.imgur.com/PKCOlYg.png e: this is the course I'm in: CAS-300039-2013CE3-Poplin-OL VMware vSphere:Inst, Conf, Mg (Oct to Dec) madsushi fucked around with this message at 03:48 on Oct 22, 2013 |
# ¿ Oct 22, 2013 03:38 |
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Bob Morales posted:Not sure if this is a SAN question or VMware question but I'll start here first. Usually you use FlexClone ($$$ license on the NetApp) to make a zero-space copy of the SnapMirrored volume, which is R/W and you can do all of your testing. Then you delete the FlexClone volume and it just goes away, leaving your pristine SnapMirror volume untouched the whole time. Without FlexClone, your options are more limited. You could make a new volume on the destination side, and then use a non-VMware tool (Linux - mount both volumes and copy) to copy VMs out of the SnapMirror volume and dump them into the dummy volume for testing.
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# ¿ Jan 8, 2014 00:32 |
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ragzilla posted:Digi AnywhereUSB or similar USB over IP/Ethernet product should work. +1. Make sure it's a Digi, a lot of the cheaper knockoffs don't work well.
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# ¿ Jan 17, 2014 22:15 |
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Daylen Drazzi posted:I've been searching all day but have yet to find an answer to my question about my RAID controller. I bought an LSI 9212-4i card to manage my two 320GB WD Blue spindle drives in RAID-1 in my ESXi box, but when I look under Hardware Status there is nothing for the drive status. I can see under Configuration/Storage/Devices that I have an LSI Serial Attached SCSI Disk, but there is no indication of the condition of the drives. Information about the drives is passed to ESXi via CIM. You need to download and install the LSI CIM modules. LSI calls this an SMI-S provider.
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# ¿ Jan 27, 2014 01:07 |
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It seems like the only actual people using Nutanix are all the VMware bloggers that Nutanix bought and put in their pocket.
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# ¿ Feb 23, 2014 00:13 |
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Dr. Arbitrary posted:This is a pretty basic question, but I have a vm on a host with plenty of CPU available, 16 vCPU * 2GHz. Where are you getting that 100% number from? The guest OS? The guest OS usually can't tell what its actual CPU usage is and will often show 100% even when it's not consuming all of the CPU allocated to it.
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# ¿ Feb 23, 2014 05:20 |
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Wicaeed posted:Would that only be caused by resource scheduling or just a general rule of VMs? General rule of VMs, at least with VMware. I think someone said that if you have the latest Windows + latest VMware tools, it's better. But in general, the in-guest monitoring of stuff like CPU is really inaccurate. Just because you assign a guest 1 vCPU doesn't mean that it gets all of the cycles of that CPU all the time. VMware will only give it what it needs/asks for, so it can think it's at 100%. If VMware sees more instructions come in, it gives it more cycles, UP TO a total of 1 vCPU. The "up to" is the key here. VMware can just give you like 500 MHz of power when you're not doing anything and Windows can't tell the difference between that and being at 100% CPU.
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# ¿ Feb 24, 2014 20:34 |
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Moey posted:So going kinda along that note. No, I always statically assign my vMotion stuff, because you never know when a DHCP hiccup will cause your cluster to become very upset.
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# ¿ Apr 5, 2014 00:50 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:On the topic of switches, since that's where I'm studying right now. You can do that with a command-line tool. The VMware way to do it is usually Host Profiles, which is $$$ (Enterprise Plus or something).
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# ¿ Apr 6, 2014 05:20 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:I want to make a community whitebox esxi image. I'm doing my own research but anyone know some common vibe that need to be added? Ill package them and upload them. No offense, but I don't think I'd ever want to install ESXi from some image that a random dude on the internet is hosting. I'd rather just get it straight from VMware with the HP/Dell stuff pre-installed and not have to worry about "is this the latest version?" and "I hope he didn't mess it up" and "I hope he didn't get hacked and now there's a rootkit".
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# ¿ May 12, 2014 08:02 |
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Martytoof posted:Is there some trick to getting the vSphere Client to format a disk with existing data/partitions as a blank VMFS5 datastore? I threw an SSD into one of my ESXi hosts and I want to use it for host cache bla bla bla, but being the lazy dude I am I didn't bother blanking it ahead of time. Yeah, especially with SSDs, you have to clear them before you toss 'em in.
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# ¿ Jun 29, 2014 20:01 |
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1000101 posted:It's probably more like "we've got a lot of cool poo poo in this beta and we want to pump up our stock/hype things up going into vmworld." Maybe the vCenter installer won't poo poo the bed when you hit 'simple install' this time.
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# ¿ Jul 2, 2014 02:10 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:Hypervisor level AV/FW's own, not a fan for turning off the windows stuff but if you are already doing FW/AV on the hypervisor level what purpose does these OS FW serve? What percentage of 2008r2 VMs would you say are running on ESXi hosts with a hypervisor firewall of any kind?
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# ¿ Jul 14, 2014 00:32 |
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How many physical NICs are backing vSwitch0 and that VMkernel? I believe you can only have 1 physical NIC per iSCSI VMkernel port. So you might have to make new VMkernel port, only assign it 1 NIC (overriding the vSwitch config) and then turn it on.
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# ¿ Jul 27, 2014 23:35 |
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Wicaeed posted:So if I have a product key for Vmware vSphere 5 Enterprise Plus (unlimited cores per CPU) what determines how many copies I can attached to vCenter Std? Nothing, really. Besides crazy-high maximums and the performance of your vCenter server (it has to keep up). Max 1,000 hosts connected to a single vCenter Max 10,000 powered on VMs connected to a single vCenter Max 500 hosts per datacenter object in vCenter
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# ¿ Jul 30, 2014 01:41 |
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So VMware just announced they're never supporting AHCI for vSAN, which translates to "home lab users get hosed". I was really hoping they'd allow an override or something to let it work, since it's only disabled on their side (worked in beta, etc).
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# ¿ Aug 17, 2014 08:22 |
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evol262 posted:My guess is "knows how to interpret SCSI commands", but it's a good question. The new requirements are a pretty steep queue depth (256?) whereas AHCI maxes at 32. So it actually takes a reasonably good controller now. They had issues with people using cheap ones in prod.
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# ¿ Aug 19, 2014 11:38 |
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There's one other reason I've run into: split virtual clusters, e.g. running a SQL cluster between a VM and a physical server.
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# ¿ Feb 11, 2015 02:11 |
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DevNull posted:Trigger warnings please. So the web client guys have moved on to containers, got it.
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# ¿ Jun 11, 2015 22:03 |
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Erwin posted:They certainly send me enough marketing emails. I'm sure they'd be happy to add you to their list. A couple of the popular VMware bloggers went over to Pernix a while ago too.
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# ¿ Jul 8, 2015 01:06 |
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# ¿ May 12, 2024 02:34 |
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DevNull posted:https://labs.vmware.com/flings/vnc-server-and-vnc-client Can you compare it to existing VNC solutions? Better support for low bandwidth?
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# ¿ Aug 17, 2015 07:47 |