Book Image

VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook

By : Abhilash G B
Book Image

VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook

By: Abhilash G B

Overview of this book

Amidst all the recent competition from Citrix and Microsoft, VMware's vSphere product line is still the most feature rich and futuristic product in the virtualization industry. Knowing how to install and configure vSphere components is important to give yourself a head start towards virtualization using VMware. If you want to quickly grasp the installation and configuration procedures, especially by using the new vSphere 5.1 web client, this book is for you.VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook will take you through all the steps required to accomplish a task with minimal reading required. Most of the tasks are accompanied with relevant screenshots with an intention to provide a visual guidance as well.The book has many useful recipes that will help you progress through the installation of VMware ESXi 5.1 and vCenter Server 5.1. You will learn to use Auto Deploy and Image Profiles to deploy stateless/stateful ESXi servers, configure failover protection for virtual machines using vSphere HA, configure automated load balancing using vSphere DRS and DPM. Finally, the book guides you through upgrading or patching ESXi servers using VMware Update Manager and also deploying and configuring vSphere Management Assistant (VMA) to be able to run scripts to manage the ESXi servers.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction


In this chapter, we will learn how to use storage profiles to ensure that the VMs are placed in appropriate datastores and how to use Storage I/O Control to manage queue bandwidth between VMs.

Before we begin with the configuration tasks, it will be beneficial to understand the concepts.

Profile-driven storage

Profile-driven storage will allow an administrator to group datastores under profiles based on the datastore's capability. The capabilities can be related to the capacity, performance, and redundancy characteristics. The capabilities can either be learned via VASA (vSphere Storage API for Storage Awareness) if the storage array supports the API, or they can be user defined. Once the profiles are defined, the virtual machine disks can be associated to these profiles. This will allow vSphere to make VM placement decisions.

Storage I/O Control (SIOC)

SIOC is used to throttle the VMkernel device queue depth of a LUN, based on the shares set on the virtual machine disks contending...