Book Image

VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By : Abhilash G B
Book Image

VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By: Abhilash G B

Overview of this book

VMware vSphere is the most comprehensive core suite of SDDC solutions on the market. It helps transform data centers into simplified on-premises private cloud infrastructures. This edition of the book focuses on the latest version, vSphere 6.7. The books starts with chapters covering the greenfield deployment of vSphere 6.7 components and the upgrade of existing vSphere components to 6.7. You will then learn how to configure storage and network access for a vSphere environment. Get to grips with optimizing your vSphere environment for resource distribution and utilization using features such as DRS and DPM, along with enabling high availability for vSphere components using vSphere HA, VMware FT, and VCHA. Then, you will learn how to facilitate large-scale deployment of stateless/stateful ESXi hosts using Auto Deploy. Finally, you will explore how to upgrade/patch a vSphere environment using vSphere Update Manager, secure it using SSL certificates, and then monitor its performance with tools such as vSphere Performance Charts and esxtop. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed in the core functionalities of vSphere 6.7 and be able to effectively deploy, manage, secure, and monitor your environment.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Configuring user-defined network pools—NIOC

The Network I/O Control (NIOC) is a vDS functionality that can manage the network bandwidth usage of system traffic types based on shares, reservation, and limits. NIOC is currently at version 3 and was released with vSphere 6.0. There are different types of system traffic management: FT, vMotion, VM, iSCSI, NFS, vSphere replication, vSAN, and vSphere data protection. The following is a screenshot of the different types of system traffic management:

By default, system traffic has no reservation. However, you can set a reservation on the virtual machine traffic type and then further segregate the bandwidth by creating network resource pools. These user-defined network resource pools are then mapped to dvPortGroups.

In this recipe, we will learn how to create user-defined network resource pools.

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