Book Image

VMware Performance and Capacity Management, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Sunny Dua
Book Image

VMware Performance and Capacity Management, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Sunny Dua

Overview of this book

Performance management and capacity management are the two top-most issues faced by enterprise IT when doing virtualization. Until the first edition of the book, there was no in-depth coverage on the topic to tackle the issues systematically. The second edition expands the first edition, with added information and reorganizing the book into three logical parts. The first part provides the technical foundation of SDDC Management. It explains the difference between a software-defined data center and a classic physical data center, and how it impacts both architecture and operations. From this strategic view, it zooms into the most common challenges—performance management and capacity management. It introduces a new concept called Performance SLA and also a new way of doing capacity management. The next part provides the actual solution that you can implement in your environment. It puts the theories together and provides real-life examples created together with customers. It provides the reasons behind each dashboard, so that you get the understanding on why it is required and what problem it solves. The last part acts as a reference section. It provides a complete reference to vSphere and vRealize Operations counters, explaining their dependencies and providing practical guidance on the values you should expect in a healthy environment.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
VMware Performance and Capacity Management Second Edition
Credits
Foreword
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Index

VM rightsizing


Remember the story in Chapter 4, Performance Monitoring, where you got blamed for a non-performing VM?

Well, part of it was your fault. You meddled with someone else's business.

Many IaaS teams are eager to help application teams downsize the VM. The number one reason is to save the company money. However, this approach is wrong. You need to approach it with respect to benefit, not cost.

There are some tips you can give your customers and policies you can set to encourage VM rightsizing from the beginning.

For a start, keep the building blocks simple—one VM, one OS, one application, and one instance. So, avoid doing things such as having one OS running the web, app, and DB server or one Microsoft SQL server running five instances of databases. The workload can become harder to predict as you cannot isolate them.

Implement a chargeback model that encourages the right behavior (for example, non-linear costing, where an eight-vCPU VM is charged more than eight times the cost of a...