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by Duncan Epping

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Happy 10th Birthday Yellow-Bricks.com

Duncan Epping · Dec 20, 2017 ·

Just wanted to share with all of you the fact that this week marks the 10th anniversary of Yellow-Bricks.com. Crazy thinking back about how it all started, and what it turned in to. Thanks everyone for taking the time to read and comment on many of the articles over the years. Those wondering what’s next, what to expect in the upcoming year? Well definitely an update to the vSAN Essentials book released yesterday, but also an update to probably one of the best sold VMware related books:

Keeping the good news coming… A preview of whats happening in 2018! #ClusterDeepDive #vExpert pic.twitter.com/yxiMXaQeSR

— Clustering Deep Dive (@ClusterDeepDive) December 19, 2017

Holiday gift: vSAN Essentials book available for free

Duncan Epping · Dec 19, 2017 ·

Christmas is coming so Cormac and I figured we would do something special for everyone, after a long debate we decided to make the vSAN Essentials book available for free. Note that this is the “Essential Virtual SAN” book which was published by VMware Press / Pearson and is based on the 6.2 version of vSAN. The book however is still very relevant today, and of course we are considering doing an update of the content to either the latest release, or maybe even to an upcoming release. You can read the book online (which is what we recommend), but you can also download it as PDF, EPUB or MOBI format. Basically you can read it anywhere, anytime and using any device. Nice right!?!

We used the Gitbook platform to publish the book and decided to leverage the beta version of gitbook as it looks very clean and makes the content easy to read online. Also, I have used the gitbook platform in the past for the HA Deepdive, and I wanted to give back by beta testing their platform. Ah well, instead of rambling on, here’s the book:

vsan-essentials.com

If you find anything unusual, please leave a comment here. Hope you will enjoy it, and appreciates us (the authors) giving back to the community. If you do then I hope you will consider donating to charity, the amount doesn’t matter, all help is welcome! I personally support Hardcore Help Foundation, and I hope you will considering doing the same! A donation of 10€ will provide clean, safe water to a family for two years. They need your help to reach out to more families in need.

Powerpoint for Mac switching resolution?

Duncan Epping · Dec 9, 2017 ·

I’ve had this issue for a long time. Whenever I would open PowerPoint and present using a projector all my diagrams and screenshot would show up fuzzy. Even if I would set up the screen configuration to be optimized for the projector it still would not look great. The funny thing is that I always have my screen setup in “mirror” mode, and this week I noticed that when I switched between my regular screen to Presenter Mode on PowerPoint that the resolution would change.

Apparently when you use presenter mode with PowerPoint on a Mac it sets the screens in “extended mode” automatically. By default it then seems to optimize for the Mac screen automatically, which usually does not work well for the projector considering most are low resolution devices. I disabled the Presenter Mode option next, and when I turned off presenter mode in PowerPoint it worked fine. You can switch it off in Preferences under Slide Show:

I normally don’t blog about this kind of stuff, but as I hardly was able to find anything useful about it anywhere I figured I would share it with the world.

Insufficient configured resources to satisfy the desired vSphere HA failover level

Duncan Epping · Dec 9, 2017 ·

I was going over some of the VMTN threads and I noticed an issue brought up with Admission Control a while ago. Completely forgot about it until it was brought up again internally. With vSphere 6.5 and vSphere HA there seems to be a problem with some Admission Control Policies. When you for instance have selected the Percentage Based Admission Control Policy and you have a low number of hosts, you could receive the following error

Insufficient configured resources to satisfy the desired vSphere HA failover level on the cluster …

I managed to reproduce this in my lab, and this is what it looks like in the UI:

It seems to happen when there’s a minor difference in resources between the host, but I am not 100% certain about it. I am trying to figure out internally if it is a known issue or not, and will come back to this when I know in which patch it will be solved and/or if it is indeed a known issue.

 

Using HA VM Component Protection in a mixed environment

Duncan Epping · Nov 29, 2017 ·

I have some customers who are running both traditional storage and vSAN in the same environment. As most of you are aware, vSAN and VMCP do not go together at this point. So what does that mean for traditional storage, as in with traditional storage for certain storage failure scenarios you can benefit from VMCP.

Well the statement around vSAN and VMCP is actually a bit more delicate. vSAN does not propagate PDL or APD in a way which VMCP understands. So you can enable VMCP in your environment, without it having an impact on VMs running on top of vSAN. The VMs which are running on the traditional storage will be able to use the VMCP functionality, and if an APD or PDL is declared on the LUN they are running on vSphere HA will take action. For vSAN, well we don’t propagate the state of a disk that way and we have other mechanisms to provide availability / resiliency.

In summary: Yes, you can enable HA VMCP in a mixed storage environment (vSAN + Traditional Storage). It is fully supported.

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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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