• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Yellow Bricks

by Duncan Epping

  • Home
  • Unexplored Territory Podcast
  • HA Deepdive
  • ESXTOP
  • Stickers/Shirts
  • Privacy Policy
  • About
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Server

vSphere 5.1 networking enhancements

Duncan Epping · Sep 6, 2012 ·

There are many networking enhancement in vSphere 5.1 but I want to call out a couple specifically. The reason for this is that there have been many discussions on this blog about “hybrid VSS / VDS” environments as many were not comfortable with running everything on a VDS. Although the risks were minimal I could understand where people were coming from. So what’s new in this space?

  1. Management network rollback and recovery
  2. VDS config backup and restore
  3. Network health check

Management Network rollback / recovery says it all I guess. I for whatever reason you made changes that will result in your host not being able to connect to vCenter then this change will not be committed. Even more importantly, if you ever end up in the situation where your host is not able to connect to the network while using a VDS you can now reconfigure it through the DCUI (Network Restore Options). I played around with it, and I think it is a huge enhancement. I don’t see a reason to go hybrid any longer… go full VDS!

Another often heard complaint was around export/import of the VDS config or backup/restore. With vSphere 5.1 this ability is now added. Not only can you save the VDS config and use it for new VDS’s but you can of course also use this feature for backup purposes (see screenshot below). Another cool feature is that if you made a change to a portgroup that was not what you intended you can actually roll it back.

Last but not least is the “Network Health Check” option. I particularly like this feature as I’ve been in the situation many times in the past that changes were made on a physical level and people forgot to inform me about it. This will allow you to quickly identify when things changed and that will make the discussion with your networking colleagues a lot easier. In this release three things are checked:

  • VLAN
  • MTU
  • Network adapter teaming

These checks will be done every minute, and is done by sending probing packets on the VDS uplinks. If for whatever reason these probing packets fail it could indicate that the config of the physical components have changed. Nice right… I am not going to reveal any more secrets as I am guessing Venky will be writing some deepdive stuff soon.

In the mean while, for more details around what’s new I would like to refer to the great what’s new paper that Venky Deshpande wrote: What’s New for Network in vSphere 5.1.

vMotion enhancement in vSphere 5.1

Duncan Epping · Sep 5, 2012 ·

There’s a nice new enhancement to vMotion in vSphere 5.1. (and no, it doesn’t have specific name :-)) With vSphere 5.1 you can migrate virtual machines live without needing “shared storage”. In other words you can vMotion virtual machines between ESXi hosts with only local storage. It is very simple:

  • Open the vSphere Web Client
  • Click “VMs and Templates”
  • Right click the VM you want to migrate
  • Select “Change both host and datastore”

I am sure Frank Denneman is going to dive in to this soon so I won’t elaborate on how the process it self works. There’s already a blogpost out by Sreekant Setty which has some more details and which points to a nice white paper about vMotion / SvMotion performance.

INF-STO2192 – Tech Preview of VMware Distributed Storage

Duncan Epping · Sep 4, 2012 ·

I could visit just one session on Tuesday so I decided I would attend a session which is on a topic that I love “Software Defined Storage”, aka vCloud Distributed Storage. This session was hosted by Christos Karamanolis and Kiran Madnani. Christos is one of the lead engineers on the project and Kiran is the product manager, both VMware employees.

Before I lay down what their session was about, note that this was a technology preview. No commitments have been made when or even IF this will ever be released… but as the demo looked so promising I figured it was worth sharing.

[Edit: Cormac Hogan published the demo, worth watching!]

Kiran started out with explaining the journey to Software Defined Storage. Awesome features he mentioned were Storage vMotion, Storage DRS, SIOC, Profile Driven Storage, vSphere Replication and more. Kieran made a statement which I can only agree with….

The world is changing, compute resource keep growing, data keeps on growing!

[Read more…] about INF-STO2192 – Tech Preview of VMware Distributed Storage

MyVMworld report

Duncan Epping · Sep 4, 2012 ·

VMworld has always been the craziest week of the year for me personally and 2012 was no exception. Being closely involved with the vCloud Suite launch I had an idea around what to expect, but I would not have expected the week to be this intense.

It is going to take me a couple of weeks to properly recover, but it was worth it. This report gives an idea of all that was going on in “my world” at VMworld 2012 in San Francisco.

Day 0

My VMworld started on Sunday at TAM day with the Birds of a Feather (BoF) lunch. These lunches are particularly interesting as you get to talk to customers in an informal setting. I was part of the BC/DR table and most of the discussions were around stretched VLANs, application discovery and re-ip’ing. I guess common operational and architectural problems people face…

[Read more…] about MyVMworld report

VMworld Barcelona, start scheduling now…

Duncan Epping · Sep 3, 2012 ·

VMworld San Francisco just ended and now we are already prepping for Barcelona. I was just checking the Schedule Builder and noticed my sessions are up there. Make sure you schedule asap as I expect these to fill up quickly again just like the US.

  • INF-BCO1159 – Architecting and Operating a VMware vSphere Metro Storage Cluster with Lee Dilworth and Duncan Epping.
    Tuesday, Oct 9, 15:30 and Thursday, Oct 11, 12:00
  • INF-VSP1168 – Architecting a Cloud Infrastructure with Chris Colotti, Aidan Dalgleish, David Hill, Rawlinson Riverra and Duncan Epping.
    Tuesday, Oct 9, 12:30
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 142
  • Page 143
  • Page 144
  • Page 145
  • Page 146
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 336
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

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.

Follow Us

  • X
  • Spotify
  • RSS Feed
  • LinkedIn

Recommended Book(s)

Also visit!

For the Dutch-speaking audience, make sure to visit RunNerd.nl to follow my running adventure, read shoe/gear/race reviews, and more!

Do you like Hardcore-Punk music? Follow my Spotify Playlist!

Do you like 80s music? I got you covered!

Copyright Yellow-Bricks.com © 2026 · Log in