• 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

recommended reads

How thermal paste can impact VM performance

Duncan Epping · Jun 30, 2016 ·

On twitter a tweet from Frank flew by pointing to an article which was written by one of my VMware colleagues: Matt Bradford aka @VMSpot. I hadn’t seen the article, while it was written in 2014 and I am surprised it never caught more attention. Matt describes in his post how the use and placement of thermal paste can influence VM performance. Who would have thought of that, and I am seriously impressed they managed to get to the bottom of this!

We haven’t had our HP BL460c Gen8’s with the new Xeon E5-2697 v2 12 core processors long. Last week we started to get e-mails from the help desk that users were complaining about sluggish performance in Citrix. Oddly, all of the XenApp VM’s happened to live on the same ESXi host. I say oddly because performance issues rarely seem to fall in line as they did here. We immediately evacuated the host and admitted it to the infirmary cluster.

…..

It didn’t seem to matter if the CPU’s were under load or idle, the temperature would not stray from 69°c. This had to be an issue with the temperature sensors, I thought. So we pulled the host and removed the heat sinks so we could look at the CPU’s through a thermal camera we borrowed from engineering.

I am not going to post the full article here, go over to Matt’s blog and have a read. It is flabbergasting if you ask me, and definitely one of the coolest reads in a long time. And thanks Frank for bringing this one up. I just had to share in on a broader platform.

That reminds me, maybe it is time to bring back my “favourite reads” post I did for a long time on the VMTN Blog, but host it here instead. Hmmm. Ah well, lets make a start here and follow up with “Recommended reads” posts in the future:

  • Compare and Contrast: Photon Controller vs VIC (vSphere Integrated Containers) by Cormac Hogan, explains the difference between these two different products/solutions. It is a great way to learn more about how VMware enables cloud native apps.
  • New Home Lab Hardware – Dual Socket Xeon v4 by Frank Denneman. I am starting to wonder who is the craziest in terms of home lab. Maybe we should do a contest, not sure Frank will win as there are some folks who have 3-4 clusters at home like Erik Bussink. Nevertheless, I like how Frank breaks down each component of his new addition.
  • Test driving ContainerX on VMware vSphere by William Lam. Always interested in learning more about what it is former VMware engineers are doing. Pradeep Padala is the CTO for ContainerX which William tested out and described in this article.
  • VMware HCL in JSON format and VMware HCL check with PowerCLI by Florian Grehl. Very useful if you want to programmatically validate your current environment against the VMware HCL.

That’s it for now, enjoy reading.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

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