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)

Configuring iSCSI multipathing using port binding

By default, ESXi generates a single path between the software iSCSI adapter and the iSCSI targets, unless the iSCSI array is a multi-portal array allowing target access via more than one network interface. To enable load balancing or redundancy for iSCSI traffic egressing an ESXi host, you will need to bind multiple VMkernel interfaces (vmk) to the software iSCSI adapter. There is an important catch to this type of configuration though, that is that the Vmkernel interfaces and the iSCSI target portals cannot be on disparate network subnets. In other words, they should be in the same broadcast domain (VLAN). This does not mean that iSCSI does not support routing; it is only a limitation with the port binding.

Port binding is only done with the software iSCSI adapter and dependent hardware iSCSI adapters.
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