Book Image

VMware vSphere 6.5 Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Abhilash G B, Cedric Rajendran
Book Image

VMware vSphere 6.5 Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Abhilash G B, Cedric Rajendran

Overview of this book

VMware vSphere is a complete and robust virtualization product suite that helps transform data centers into simplified on-premises cloud infrastructures, providing for the automation and orchestration of workload deployment and life cycle management of the infrastructure. This book focuses on the latest release of VMware vSphere and follows a recipe-based approach, giving you hands-on instructions required to deploy and manage a vSphere environment. The book starts with the procedures involved in upgrading your existing vSphere infrastructure to vSphere 6.5, followed by deploying a new vSphere 6.5 environment. Then the book delves further into the procedures involved in managing storage and network access to the ESXi hosts and the virtual machines running on them. Moving on, the book covers high availability and fair distribution/utilization of clustered compute and storage resources. Finally, the book covers patching and upgrading the vSphere infrastructure using VUM, certificate management using VMCA, and finishes with a chapter covering the tools that can be used to monitor the performance of a vSphere infrastructure.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Creating user-defined network resource pools

Network I/O Control (NIOC) has the ability to detect system traffic type and control its bandwidth usage based on shares, reservations, and limits.

There are nine system traffic types as shown in the following list:

  • Fault tolerance traffic
  • Management traffic
  • NFS traffic
  • Virtual machine traffic (this needs to be enabled)
  • Virtual SAN traffic
  • iSCSI traffic
  • vMotion traffic
  • vSphere data protection backup traffic
  • vSphere replication traffic

System traffic types don't have any reservations by default. However, we are allowed to set a reservation on each of the traffic types by editing their settings.

User-defined network resource pools allow further segregation and control over the VM traffic detected by the NIOC. In this recipe, we will learn how to create one.

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