Book Image

Mastering VMware vSphere 6.7, - Second Edition

By : Martin Gavanda, Andrea Mauro, Paolo Valsecchi, Karel Novak
Book Image

Mastering VMware vSphere 6.7, - Second Edition

By: Martin Gavanda, Andrea Mauro, Paolo Valsecchi, Karel Novak

Overview of this book

vSphere 6.7 is the latest release of VMware’s industry-leading, virtual cloud platform. It allows organisations to move to hybrid cloud computing by enabling them to run, manage, connect and secure applications in a common operating environment. This up-to-date, 2nd edition provides complete coverage of vSphere 6.7. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts, practical examples and self-assessment questions, you will begin with an overview of the products, solutions and features of the vSphere 6.7 suite. You’ll learn how to design and plan a virtual infrastructure and look at the workflow and installation of components. You'll gain insight into best practice configuration, management and security. By the end the book you'll be able to build your own VMware vSphere lab that can run even the most demanding of workloads.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started
8
Section 2: Managing Resources
13
Section 3: Advanced Topics
18
Section 4: Building Your Lab Environment

Virtual machine clustering

Virtual machine clustering is an infrastructure configuration, where two systems and applications act as a single, logical unit. There is no direct connection to VMware vSphere. Clustering must be supported by the underlying operating system or the application itself.

In general, both systems must have simultaneous write access to the storage device so both can act as a primary or standby instance.

Mission-critical systems such as production databases are usually clustered, so in any situation, you have at least one instance available. For this reason, you can't use VMware HA technology because, as we have already explained, the VM restarts during the HA failover, resulting in application downtime. You can, in theory, use FT, but there will be limitations as well. In the case of FT, there are two significant disadvantages—performance degradation...