feng | 04 Fé, 2010, 07:21 |
Général | (2731 Reads)
NPIV support is subject to the following limitations:
o NPIV must be enabled on the SAN switch.
o NPIV is supported only for VMs with RDM disks.
o The physical HBAs on the ESX host must have access to a LUN using its WWNs in order for any VMs on that host to have access to that
LUN using their NPIV WWNs.
220 702 o The physical HBAs on the ESX host must support NPIV.
o Each VMcan have up to 4 virtual ports. NPIV-enabled VMs are assigned exactly 4 NPIV-related WWNs. Can utilize up to 4 physical HBAs
for NPIV purposes.
o A VM with WWNs that are already in use on the storage network is prevented from powering on.
o While hyperthreading does not double the performance of a system, it can increase performance by better utilizing idle resources.
o The advanced CPU settings are useful only for fine-grained tweaking of critical VMs.
o NUMA memory node affinity enables fine-grained control over how VM memory is distributed to host physical memory.
o Specify nodes to be used for future memory allocations only if you have also specified CPU affinity.
o The following NIC types are supported:
vNIC Description
Flexible Supported on VMs that were created on ESX Server 3.0 or greater and that run 32-bit guest operating systems.
The Flexible adapter functions as a vlance adapter if VMware Tools is not installed in the VM and as a vmxnet
driver if VMware Tools is installed in the VM.
e1000 Emulates the functioning of an E1000 network card. It is the default adapter type for VMs that run 64-bit guest
operating systems.
Enhanced vmxnet An upgraded version of the vmxnet device with enhanced performance. It requires that VMware Tools be
installed in the VM.
vmxnet 3 Next generation vmxnet device with enhanced performance and enhanced networking features. It requires that
VMware Tools be installed in the VM, and is available only on VMs with hardware version 7 and greater.
o Independent disks are not affected by snapshots.
o Two modes for independent disks:
o Persistent – The disk operates normall 9L0-403 y except that changes to the disk are permanent even if the VM is reverted to a snapshot.
o Nonpersistent – The disk appears to operate normally, but whenever the VM is powered off or reverted to a snapshot, the contents of
the disk return to their original state. All later changes are discarded.
o VMDirectPath I/O allows a guest operating system on a VM to directly access physical PCI and PCIe devices connected to a host. Each VM can
be connected to up to two PCI devices. PCI devices connected to a host can be marked as available for passthrough from the Hardware
Advanced Settings in the Configuration tab for the host.
o Paravirtual SCSI (PVSCSI) adapters are high-performance storage adapters that can provide greater throughput and lower CPU utilization.
PVSCSI adapters are best suited for environments, especially SAN environments, running I/O-intensive applications. PVSCSI adapters are not
suited for DAS environments.
o Hardware requirements for customizing the guest operating system:
o Must reside on a disk attached as SCSI 0:0 node in the VM configuration.
o If a VM has mixed IDE and SCSI disks, the first IDE disk is considered the boot disk, and vCenter Server passes it to the customizer.
o If the new VM encounters customization errors while it is booting
o Customization errors are logged to (Windows guest) %WINDIR%tempvmware-imc or (Linux guest) /var/log/vmware/customization.log.
o When you migrate a suspended VM, the new host for the VM must meet CPU compatibility requirements, because the VM must resume
executing instructions on the new host.
o Use of Jumbo Frames is recommended for best VMotion performance.
o Some restrictions apply when migrating VMs with snapshots. You cannot migrate a virtual machine with snapshots with Storage VMotion.
o You can migrate as long as the VM is being migrated to a new host without moving its configuration file or disks (the VM must reside on
shared storage accessible to both hosts).
o Reverting to a snapshot after migration with VMotion might cause the VM to fail, because the migration wizard cannot verify the compatibility
of the VM state in the snapshot with the destination host.
o During a migration with Storage VMotion, you can transform virtual disks from thick-provisioned to thin or from thin-provisioned to thick.
o Storage VMotion is subject to the following requirements and limitations:
o Virtual machines with snapshots cannot be migrated using Storage VMotion.
o Virtual machine disks must be in persistent mode or be raw device mappings (RDMs). For virtual compatibility mode RDMs, you can
migrate the mapping file or convert to thick-provisioned or thinprovisioned disks during migration as long as the destination is not an NFS
datastore. For physical compatibility mode RDMs, you can migrate the mapping file only.
9L0-510 o Must have a license that includes Storage VMotion.
o ESX/ESXi 3.5 hosts must be licensed and configured for VMotion. ESX/ESXi 4.0 and later hosts do not require VMotion configuration in
order to perform migration with Storage VMotion.
o A particular host can be involved in up to two migrations with VMotion or Storage VMotion at one time
o NPIV must be enabled on the SAN switch.
o NPIV is supported only for VMs with RDM disks.
o The physical HBAs on the ESX host must have access to a LUN using its WWNs in order for any VMs on that host to have access to that
LUN using their NPIV WWNs.
220 702 o The physical HBAs on the ESX host must support NPIV.
o Each VMcan have up to 4 virtual ports. NPIV-enabled VMs are assigned exactly 4 NPIV-related WWNs. Can utilize up to 4 physical HBAs
for NPIV purposes.
o A VM with WWNs that are already in use on the storage network is prevented from powering on.
o While hyperthreading does not double the performance of a system, it can increase performance by better utilizing idle resources.
o The advanced CPU settings are useful only for fine-grained tweaking of critical VMs.
o NUMA memory node affinity enables fine-grained control over how VM memory is distributed to host physical memory.
o Specify nodes to be used for future memory allocations only if you have also specified CPU affinity.
o The following NIC types are supported:
vNIC Description
Flexible Supported on VMs that were created on ESX Server 3.0 or greater and that run 32-bit guest operating systems.
The Flexible adapter functions as a vlance adapter if VMware Tools is not installed in the VM and as a vmxnet
driver if VMware Tools is installed in the VM.
e1000 Emulates the functioning of an E1000 network card. It is the default adapter type for VMs that run 64-bit guest
operating systems.
Enhanced vmxnet An upgraded version of the vmxnet device with enhanced performance. It requires that VMware Tools be
installed in the VM.
vmxnet 3 Next generation vmxnet device with enhanced performance and enhanced networking features. It requires that
VMware Tools be installed in the VM, and is available only on VMs with hardware version 7 and greater.
o Independent disks are not affected by snapshots.
o Two modes for independent disks:
o Persistent – The disk operates normall 9L0-403 y except that changes to the disk are permanent even if the VM is reverted to a snapshot.
o Nonpersistent – The disk appears to operate normally, but whenever the VM is powered off or reverted to a snapshot, the contents of
the disk return to their original state. All later changes are discarded.
o VMDirectPath I/O allows a guest operating system on a VM to directly access physical PCI and PCIe devices connected to a host. Each VM can
be connected to up to two PCI devices. PCI devices connected to a host can be marked as available for passthrough from the Hardware
Advanced Settings in the Configuration tab for the host.
o Paravirtual SCSI (PVSCSI) adapters are high-performance storage adapters that can provide greater throughput and lower CPU utilization.
PVSCSI adapters are best suited for environments, especially SAN environments, running I/O-intensive applications. PVSCSI adapters are not
suited for DAS environments.
o Hardware requirements for customizing the guest operating system:
o Must reside on a disk attached as SCSI 0:0 node in the VM configuration.
o If a VM has mixed IDE and SCSI disks, the first IDE disk is considered the boot disk, and vCenter Server passes it to the customizer.
o If the new VM encounters customization errors while it is booting
o Customization errors are logged to (Windows guest) %WINDIR%tempvmware-imc or (Linux guest) /var/log/vmware/customization.log.
o When you migrate a suspended VM, the new host for the VM must meet CPU compatibility requirements, because the VM must resume
executing instructions on the new host.
o Use of Jumbo Frames is recommended for best VMotion performance.
o Some restrictions apply when migrating VMs with snapshots. You cannot migrate a virtual machine with snapshots with Storage VMotion.
o You can migrate as long as the VM is being migrated to a new host without moving its configuration file or disks (the VM must reside on
shared storage accessible to both hosts).
o Reverting to a snapshot after migration with VMotion might cause the VM to fail, because the migration wizard cannot verify the compatibility
of the VM state in the snapshot with the destination host.
o During a migration with Storage VMotion, you can transform virtual disks from thick-provisioned to thin or from thin-provisioned to thick.
o Storage VMotion is subject to the following requirements and limitations:
o Virtual machines with snapshots cannot be migrated using Storage VMotion.
o Virtual machine disks must be in persistent mode or be raw device mappings (RDMs). For virtual compatibility mode RDMs, you can
migrate the mapping file or convert to thick-provisioned or thinprovisioned disks during migration as long as the destination is not an NFS
datastore. For physical compatibility mode RDMs, you can migrate the mapping file only.
9L0-510 o Must have a license that includes Storage VMotion.
o ESX/ESXi 3.5 hosts must be licensed and configured for VMotion. ESX/ESXi 4.0 and later hosts do not require VMotion configuration in
order to perform migration with Storage VMotion.
o A particular host can be involved in up to two migrations with VMotion or Storage VMotion at one time
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