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vSphere 4.1 Hidden Gem: Host Affinity Rules

July 16, 2010 Leave a Comment

During the vSphere 4.1 beta period, two of my clients were very interested in the new Host Affinity Rules for issues they were having.  The day vSphere 4.1 was released I had a call to discuss Host Affinity Rules with another client to explore issues they were having that host affinity rules could solve.  Each of these global enterprise clients are running 1000’s of VMs in production and each have different uses for Host Affinity Rules that the average user may overlook.

I was planning on providing a quick overview of the Host Affinity Rules in this post, but Frank Denneman already provided a great overview that I can’t really improve on.  Start with his post to to understand the basics of the new Host Affinity Rules.

A few Host Affinity Rule use cases:

  • Physical server based software licensing:  As hard as it is to believe, some software vendors still tie their software to physical computers.  Using Host Affinity rules allow you to purchase licenses for a subset of your physical servers in your vSphere cluster. (typically 2 so you have HA).  By forcing the VMs running the software in question to run on specific servers, you can ensure compliance with the software licensing.
  • Isolation for troublesome VMs: as with most troubleshooting processes, the newest thing in an environment usually gets the blame.  For one of my clients this means that new workloads moved into the vSphere environment that have performance issues result in the application owners blaming vSphere for the performance issues.  Even after using something like vCenter AppSpeed to show the user where the performance problem exists in their application, app owners still won’t believe it until their VM is running by itself.  With Host Affinity Rules, you can force the problem-some VM to run on a server that has nothing else on it.  (Take that non-believer app owner!)
  • Another approach to host pinning and reservations:  Some clients use pinning and reservations to help ensure certain levels of performance for some of their end users.  Like any over-riding control, you can eventually end up with more of these rules than can be realistically managed.  Host Affinity rules could be used in their place by forcing a more large grained control.  Of course, the same rule sprawl can occur with host affinity rules.  So it’s best to use them sparingly at first and really make sure the end users really need them before using them.  After all, cloud computing is supposed to make things easier for both end users and IT administrators…fight the gravitational pull of end user special needs.  More often than not these needs don’t really exist.

Filed Under: New Tech, Virtualization, VMware Tagged With: Host Affinity Rules, vSphere 4.1

VMware Releases vSphere 4.1 & Licensing Changes

July 13, 2010 1 Comment

Today is the big day that vSphere 4.1 is finally released. This dot release is jam packed with new features that some of my clients have been testing for the past six months in beta. The ones that have been strongly received by my enterprise clients include:

  • Increased vSphere scalability (2-3x increase in vCenter scale, see config maximums pdf for details)
  • Storage IO Control (SIOC)
  • Additional Storage Statistics in vCenter
  • NFS Performance Enhancements
  • Network IO Control (NIOC)
  • VMware HA Healthcheck and Operational Status
  • Host Affinity Rules
  • vMotion Enhancements (5x better vMotion performance, note that small v… 🙂 )
  • Memory Compression
  • USB Device Passthrough from an ESX/ESXi Host to a Virtual Machine (a peer of mine said he was amazed at how every USB device he could think to throw at it just work, though I’m sure someone will find exceptions to this.)

There was also some changes in the vSphere licensing. Specifically formalization of vSphere Kits and Editions:

  • Kits are pre-packaged for specific use case needs.
  • Editions are the different tiers of of increasing product capability to cover the spectrum from small businesses to global enterprises. There were some feature changes between Editions as well.

vSphere 4.1 Editions

Update: Here is Steve Herrod’s blog post on this release as well as Bogomil Balkansky’s blog post.  I also forgot to mention that free ESXi is now being referred to as vSphere Hypervisor, the first tier in the above diagram.

Additional product releases coinciding with vSphere 4.1:

  • vCenter Site Recover Manager (SRM) 4.1 was released today as well.  This version of SRM is compatible with vSphere 4.1 and contains a number of new features, see release notes.
  • VMware Studio 2.1 was released today as well.  This version is compatible with vSphere 4.1 and adds support for new Linux GOS and OVF versions as well as a slew of other features, see release notes.
  • vCenter Server Heartbeat 6.3 was release today as well.  This version is compatible with VC 4.1 as well as additional features, see release notes.

Filed Under: Virtualization, VMware Tagged With: New Release, vSphere

Virtualization Round Up 20100608

June 8, 2010 Leave a Comment

I know it’s been a long drought of round ups out here on the range…which means I have a rather larger backlog of items to share, some of these might be items you came across earlier but I thought were worth repeating.

With all the projects and activities I have going on (and unfortunately for the blog, too many VMware related ones being the kind I can’t talk about…yet), I’ve found it more difficult to post these Virtualization Round Up’s on a regular basis.  I anticipate it will only get more difficult moving forward, especially with the arrival of Baby Mini-G in about 3 months.

So, this will be the last regular round up for the foreseeable future (I may sneak one in now and again when big things happen).

To get more regular pointers to virtualization items of interest, follow me on Twitter as I will be switching to posting these types of links there during working hours with the hashtag “VRU”.  Note: I am crossing the streams in my twitter feed…

VMware Specific Links

  • Recent New Releases
    • VMware Fusion 3.1: release notes (zoom, zoom)
    • VMware Workstation 7.1:  release notes (New Support for 32-Bit and 64-Bit Operating Systems)
    • VMware ThinApp 4.5:  release notes (relatively recent release…)
  • Gartner issued their first ever Virtualization Magic Quadrant recently, and while they get upset when people steal their thunder and show you the graph I can say that VMW is the only one in the upper right Leaders quadrant…way up and to the right!  Gartner explains how the Magic Quadrant evaluation works.
    • Update 20100610: VMware has made the reprint of the Magic Quadrant for x86 Server Virtualization Infrastructure publicly available through Garnter!
  • Steve Ballmer made it official today, VMware Now On Microsoft’s Enemies List last in line behind Oracle, Apple, and Google. (Thanks for the market cap bump Steve!)
  • VMware Customer Surveys (from our Product Teams)
    • SRM customers, please provide your feedback to SRM Product Managers. Survey open until June 10th.
    • How you are using Snapshots in your environment.
  • Psst…want to see an upcoming feature sneak peak?  Check out Storage IO Control (SIOC)
  • Who’s using Wyse’s PocketCloud on their iPad?  I have had limited uses to date, but handy tool to have in the tool box. (I feel so dirty with my fingers all over the windows desktop… 🙂 )
  • Every one of my client’s is interested in transparently moving a running workload from one data center to another.  MikeD recently posted about F5’s Long Distance vMotion solution.
    • Are you interested in Long Distance vMotion? Love to hear if you’re doing it or why you’re can’t implement it today…leave a comment and share your thoughts…
  • I recently learned that EMC has a Community forum covering Everything VMware at EMC.  Loads to great stuff in there!
  • VMware environment took the top spot in a TPC Performance comparison, see the third table for 1,000 GB results.  Who says you can’t run high IOPS in a VM?
  • VMworld 2010
    • Want to go to VMworld 2010 in San Francisco but can’t swing the cost this year?  Win A Free VMworld Pass From boche.net and Airfare from Gestalt IT.  The contest entry deadline is Noon Central Time on Thursday, June 17th…so hurry up and enter…Good luck!
  • The Developer Cloud
    • Steve Herrod talks about VMforce and VMware’s “Open PaaS” Strategy and Rod Johnson, from SpringSource, discouss how VMforce Provides Spring Cloud Platform.
    • Steve Herrod talks about Google and VMware’s “Open PaaS” Strategy as well as a the acquisition of RabbitMQ.
    • Infoworld’s Neil McAllister shares his thoughts on VMware’s master plan for portable Java in the cloud
  • Virtualization Security
    • Back in March RSA Announced Collaboration with VMware and Intel to deliver proof of concept for Business-Critical security, compliance, and control in the cloud. This was a future looking statement that flew a bit under the radar…
    • Few months back VMware published the final version of vSphere 4.0 Hardening Guidelines
  • Desktop Virtualization
    • ClearPath posted the details on using scripts and View’s Group Policy ADM files to Location Based Applications with ThinApp and View
    • The ThinApp team describes Using ThinApp MSI’s to Replace a Native App
    • I’ve been running the VMware View Open Client on my MacOS for a few months now and love the native access from the Mac.  Yes, it doesn’t support PCoIP but it works as a great stop gap measure for the time being…
    • Andre Leibovici provides some great tips on How to troubleshoot PCoIP performance
  • Recent VMware-ians who started blogging:
    • Performance Specialist Mark Achtemichuk’s Virtualization Eh (yes, he’s Canadian… 🙂  )
    • Senior Consultant Frank Denneman’s FrankDenneman
    • VP of Desktop Products Vittorio Viarengo’s Virtualization Journey

General Virtualization & Cloud Links

  • Massimo Re Ferre’ recently talked about the Public Cloud adoption curve and how history repeats.
  • It may come as not surprise that EMC’s IT team is working toward 100% virtualization (VMware’s IT team is at about 98%  😉 ).  But did you know that EMC’s IT team is blogging about their Journey to the Private Cloud?
  • Vittorio Viarengo has some More Best Practices for running IT Production virtualized.

Filed Under: Tech Industry, Virtualization, VMware Tagged With: Link List

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About latoga labs

With over 25 years of partnering leadership and direct GTM experience, Greg A. Lato provides consulting services to companies in all stages of their partnering journey to Ecosystem Led Growth.