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by Duncan Epping

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Protecting vCenter Server – HA or Heartbeat?

Duncan Epping · Sep 19, 2012 ·

At VMworld during one of my group discussions there was a discussion around using vSphere HA or vCenter Heartbeat to protect the vCenter Server. Coincidentally it is something that we recently discussed internally on Socialcast and I figured I would give my thoughts on this topic. My answer was short and simple: It depends.

Yes I bet some of you saw that coming… But let me elaborate. vCenter availability is crucial in my opinion when it comes to operating your environment. However your environment is not about vSphere. Your environment is not really about virtual machines. Your environment is about the services that you offer!

Your service level agreement typically is based on up-time of the service, makes sense right. No one really cares about the management platform, well I do and you do but your customers probably do not. Your customers care about the availability of their service.

Will their service have an interruption when vCenter is down is the question you will need to ask yourself. In most cases the answer will probably be no, and in those cases you will need to ask yourself what the downtime is you can afford from a management perspective. Is a minute or two okay? Than vSphere HA can help you and there is no need for Heartbeat or other complex clustering solutions. If a couple of minutes is not acceptable than Heartbeat is an option.

If there is a service interruption for the customer when vCenter is down (for instance in a test / dev cloud where provisioning processes are key, vCloud Director, View) you should consider using vCenter Heartbeat. Again, it all depends on your service level agreement. In some cases vCenter availability is crucial, in other cases a downtime of minutes is within the defined boundaries. The answer remains, it depends… it depends on your use case and service level agreement.

vCloud Suite 5.1 available

Duncan Epping · Sep 11, 2012 ·

No I didn’t set my alarm clock like Eric Sloof, just to be one of the first to post it… hence the reason this is “late”. But I got some more lined up for you though in the upcoming days. Now that the vCloud Suite 5.1 is available. Make sure to start your download engines and prep to upgrade. Before you start downloading, make sure to hit the launch page. I created a nice short URL for it

VMware NOW – Get the Latest Info on VMware Product Launches:
http://vmwa.re/vcloudnow

Download links:

  • ESXi 5.1.0 Installable
  • vCenter Server 5.1.0 and modules
  • VMware vCloud Director 5.1.0
  • VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager 5.1.0
  • VMware vCenter Infrastructure Navigator 1.2.0
  • VMware vCenter Operations Management 5.0.3
  • VMware vCenter Configuration Manager 5.5.1
  • vSphere Data Protection 5.1.0 
  • vSphere Replication 5.1.0
  • vSphere Storage Appliance 5.1.0 
  • vCloud Networking and Security 5.1.0
  • vSphere PowerCLI 5.1
  • vSphere CLI 5.1
  • vCenter Orchestrator Appliance 5.1.0
  • vSphere Management Assistant 5.1

What’s new docs:

  • What’s New in VMware vSphere 5.1
  • What’s new in VMware vCenter 5.1
  • What’s New in VMware vSphere 5.1 – Networking
  • What’s New in VMware vSphere 5.1 – Platform
  • What’s New in VMware vSphere 5.1 – Storage
  • What’s New in VMware vSphere 5.1 – Performance
  • Introduction to VMware vSphere Replication
  • Introduction to VMware vSphere Data Protection
  • What’s new in VMware vSphere Storage Appliance
  • What’s new in vCloud Director 5.1

 

VMworld 2012 San Francisco… what a week

Duncan Epping · Sep 2, 2012 ·

It was a crazy week last week, VMworld 2012 SFO kept us all very very busy. I have a bunch of blog articles to finalize, so more will follow this week. Just a couple of keywords that summarize the craziness of this week for me:

  • New book release, vSphere 5.1 Clustering Deepdive
  • 5 speaking slots, 1 group discussion slot and 2 “expert” slots
  • Meetings, meetings and more meetings
  • Receptions and parties, triple booked every evening
  • 1200+ copies of the 5.1 book handed out / sold at VMworld!

Just some random pics to give an impression of the week… Thanks everyone for taking these pictures. If you have full res pictures please email them to me (duncan @ yellow-…com).

And a VMworld TV video to top it off. (Nice to see the infamous Eric Sloof presenting / interviewing for VMworld TV along side Jeremy van Doorn!) Make sure to follow VMworldTV on twitter for updates!

I want to thank everyone who took the time to say hi, provide feedback, have open discussions or just wanted to shake hands / get books signed. I really appreciate it and it was great meeting all of you!

See you again in Barcelona,

Demo time – vCloud Director 5.1 disaster recovery demo

Duncan Epping · Aug 30, 2012 ·

When I was playing with the new vCloud Director 5.1 and Site Recovery Manager 5.1 I figured I would record a demo of the DR solution that Chris Colotti and I developed. The demo is fairly straight forward and hopefully helps you in the process of building a resilient cloud infrastructure. In this demo I have included:

  • vSphere 5.1
    • vSphere Replication
  • vCloud Director 5.1
  • Site Recovery Manager 5.1

Demo time – Consuming vCloud Director 5.1 resources in 10 minutes…

Duncan Epping · Aug 29, 2012 ·

We all know how difficult it can be to implement and configure a new infrastructure. Racking, cabling, configuring VLANs, setting policies / permissions, firewalling etc. It is a lot of work… Well in a physical world it is a lot of work, in a vCloud Director environment that is slightly different. In this demo that I recorded I am going to show you:

  • Login as a vCloud Admin
    • How to create an organization
    • How to create an organization virtual datacenter
      • Selecting a specific compute tier
      • Selecting all storage tiers
      • Selecting a specific networking tier
    • How to create an Edge Gateway
    • How to create add a vApp to a Catalog
  • Login as the tenant:
    • Deploy a 3-tier vApp with each VM on a different storage tier
    • Snapshot the full vApp

All of that in under 10 minutes, I could do it faster… but I guess it would be difficult to watch then :). Anyway, I hope this demo shows how easy it is to provide access and resources to a tenant in a vCloud environment .

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About the Author

Duncan Epping is a Chief Technologist and Distinguished Engineering Architect at Broadcom. Besides writing on Yellow-Bricks, Duncan is the co-author of the vSAN Deep Dive and the vSphere Clustering Deep Dive book series. Duncan is also the host of the Unexplored Territory Podcast.

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