Book Image

Dell VxRail System Design and Best Practices

By : Victor Wu
Book Image

Dell VxRail System Design and Best Practices

By: Victor Wu

Overview of this book

Virtualized systems are well established now, and their disparate components can be found bundled together in hyper-converged infrastructures, such as VxRail from Dell EMC. Dell VxRail System Design and Best Practices will take you, as a system architect or administrator, through the process of designing and protecting VxRail systems. While this book assumes a certain level of knowledge of VMware, vSphere 7.x, and vCenter Server, you’ll get a thorough overview of VxRail's components, features, and architecture, as well as a breakdown of the benefits of this hyper-converged system. This guide will give you an in-depth understanding of VxRail, as well as plenty of practical examples and self-assessment questions along the way to help you plan and design every core component of a VxRail system – from vSAN storage policies to cluster expansion. It's no good having a great system if you lose everything when it breaks, so you'll spend some time examining advanced recovery options, such as VMware Site Recovery Manager and Veeam Backup and Replication. By the end of this book, you will have got to grips with Dell’s hyper-converged VxRail offering, taking your virtualization proficiency to the next level.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started with the VxRail Appliance 7.x System
4
Part 2: Design of the VxRail Appliance 7.x System
9
Part 3: Design of Data Protection for the VxRail System

Failure scenarios of a VxRail vSAN two-node cluster

This section will discuss some failure scenarios of a VxRail vSAN two-node cluster. The virtual machines allocated on the VxRail vSAN two-node cluster trigger different behavior when any hardware failure (for example, to the VxRail node, vSAN witness, HDD, or network uplinks) exists in the cluster. In Figure 6.12, there are four virtual machines (VM A/B/C/D) running on this VxRail vSAN two-node cluster. VMs A and B are allocated on Fault Domain 1, and VMs C and D are allocated on Fault Domain 2. A disk group (one SSD cache and three HDDs) is created on each VxRail node:

Figure 6.12 – The VxRail vSAN two-node cluster

The next section will discuss the four failover scenarios, including FD hardware failures, a faulty vSAN witness, disconnected network uplinks, and HDD failures.

Scenario one

In Figure 6.13, what status will the virtual machines trigger if VxRail Node 2 is faulty in the VxRail vSAN...