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by Duncan Epping

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availability

Changing advanced vSphere FT related settings, is that supported?

Duncan Epping · Feb 1, 2018 ·

This week I received a question around changing the values for vSphere FT related advanced settings. This customer is working on an environment where uptime is key. Of course the application layer is one side, but they also want to have additional availability from an infrastructure perspective. Which means vSphere HA and vSphere FT are key.

They have various VMs they need to enable FT on, these are vSMP VMs (meaning in this case dual CPU). Right now each host is limited to 4 FT VMs and at most 8 vCPUs, this is being controlled by two advanced settings called “das.maxftvmsperhost” and “das.maxFtVCpusPerHost”. The values for these are, obviously, 4 and 8. The question was: can I edit these and still have a supported configuration? Also, why 4 and 8?

I spoke to the product team about this and the answer is: yes, you can safely edit these. These values were set based on typical bandwidth and resource constraints customers have. An FT VM easily consumes between 1-3Gbps of bandwidth, meaning that if you dedicate a 10Gbps link to it you will fit roughly 4 VMs. I say roughly as of course the workload matters: CPU, Memory and IO pattern.

If you have a 40Gbps NIC, and you have plenty of cores and memory you could increase those max numbers for FT VMs per host and FT vCPUs. However, it must be noted that if you run in to problems VMware GSS may request you to revert back to the default just to ensure the issues that occur aren’t due to this change as VMware tests with the default values.

UPDATE to this content can be found here: https://www.yellow-bricks.com/2022/11/18/can-you-exceed-the-number-of-ft-enabled-vcpus-per-host-or-number-of-ft-enabled-vcpus-per-vm/

vCenter Availability and Performance survey

Duncan Epping · Jun 4, 2014 ·

One of the VMware product managers asked me to share this with you guys and ask you to please take the time to fill out this vCenter Server availability and performance survey. It is a very in-depth survey which should help the engineering team and the product management team making the right decisions when it comes to scalability and availability. So if you feel vCenter scalability and availability is important, take the time to fill it out!

tinyurl.com/VCPerf

Database clustering support for vCloud Director added in version 5.1!

Duncan Epping · Oct 18, 2012 ·

Those who have been architecting vCloud Director environments from the early days know that this has always been a pain point. I personally have had many discussions with product management and engineering to get support for database clustering like Oracle RAC or Microsoft clustering services for MS SQL. Unfortunately neither 1.0 and 1.5 supported it. So the big questions always was, when will database clustering support for vCloud Director be added?

I had a couple of discussions around this again last week and noticed it was still not listed until someone pointed me to the vCAT 3.0 documents. Hidden on page 110 of document “3a Architecting a VMware vCloud.pdf” I found the following statement:

VMware vCloud component database resiliency is provided through database clustering. Microsoft Cluster Service for SQL and Oracle RAC are supported.

Yes I do realize that this is not a KB article, or even mentioned in the vCloud Director documentation. I have requested the docs to be revised and a KB to be created. Hopefully those will follow soon, for now this statement is all we needed! When the docs are revised or a KB is published I will add the references to this article.

<update – 18/Oct/2012> KB just got added – http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2037802 </update>

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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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