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Event Season has lifted off! #VirtualRoadshow

Duncan Epping · May 28, 2020 ·

It seems that Event Season has lifted off, and the virtual roadshow has really started. I can’t remember a point in time where I had this many events scheduled in a few months. Actually, I think I have more events scheduled in the upcoming 3 months than I had in the previous 12. I guess the whole Corona situation has made people realize that we don’t necessarily need to be in a single room together to share knowledge and discuss interesting situations, architectures, and/or problems. Considering I have many different events planned, I figured I would share the links where you can register for these. If you are a VMUG leader and are interested in hosting a virtual event, feel free to drop me (or Frank Denneman / Cormac Hogan) a note, and we can see how we can fit it in our schedule.

  • June 4th – VMUG Romania – VMware Platform for a New Decade with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • June 23rd – VMware vSAN 7.0 what’s new Webinar by Duncan Epping
  • June 25th – VMUG Scotland / Ireland – VMware Platform for a New Decade with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • June 30th – VMUG Germany – VMware Platform for a New Decade with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • July 2nd – VMUG England – VMware Platform for a New Decade with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • July 7th – VMware vSAN File Services and Cloud Native Workloads with Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • September 9th – VMUG Southern Virginia – with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • September 17th – VMUG Nordics (Denmark / Norway / Sweden) – VMware Platform for a New Decade with Frank Denneman, Cormac Hogan and Duncan Epping
  • October 6th – VMUG New York Keynote – Duncan Epping
  • December 10th – VMUG Portland Keynote – Duncan Epping

These are the “public” virtual events that are planned right now in a virtual format. There are a few more events that I will be presenting at, but these are mostly invite-only events for VMware TAM customers. Of course, we are also working with various other VMUGs that had events scheduled to see how we can turn it into a successful virtual event, so the above list will be updated in the near future probably.

If you are a member of any of the above VMUG chapters, make sure to register, and I hope to see you at one of those events.

Virtually Speaking Podcast: Rubrik and Virtual SAN

Duncan Epping · Jun 21, 2016 ·

As John Nicholson was on a holiday I got to co-host the Virtually Speaking Podcast together with Pete Flecha. As a guest we had Chris Wahl and we spoke about many different things, but the key theme was Rubrik and the paper Chris and Cormac wrote that talks about Rubrik backing up VMs that sit on top of VSAN. I think it was a fun conversation and just wanted to share it with you here. For those who haven’t listened to Virtually Speaking Podcast yet, make sure to subscribe and catch each episode as they are entertaining and educational at the same time if you ask me!

Best Practices: running vCenter virtual (vSphere)

Duncan Epping · Oct 9, 2009 ·

Yesterday we had a discussion on running vCenter virtual on one of the internal mailinglists. One of the gaps identified was the lack of a best practices document. Although there are multiple for VI3 and there are some KB articles these do need seem to be easy to find or complete. This is one of the reasons I wrote this article. Keep in mind that these are my recommendations and they do not necessarily align with VMware’s recommendations or requirements.

Sizing

Sizing is one of the most difficult parts in my opinion. As of vSphere the minimum requirements of vCenter have changed but it goes against my personal opinion on this subject. My recommendation would be to always start with 1 vCPU for environments with less than 10 hosts for instance. Here’s my suggestion:

  • < 10 ESX Hosts
    • 1 x vCPU
    • 3GB of memory
    • Windows 64Bit OS(preferred) or Windows 32Bit OS
  • > 10 ESX Hosts but < 50 ESX Hosts
    • 2 x vCPU
    • 4GB of memory
    • Windows 64Bit OS(preferred) or Windows 32Bit OS
  • > 50 ESX hosts but < 200 ESX Hosts
    • 4 x vCPU
    • 4GB of memory
    • Windows 64Bit OS(preferred) or Windows 32Bit OS
  • > 200 ESX Hosts
    • 4 x vCPU
    • 8GB of memory
    • Windows 64Bit OS(requirement)

My recommendation differ from VMware’s recommendation. The reason for this is that in small environments(<10 Hosts) there’s usually more flexibility for increasing resources in terms of scheduling down time. Although 2 vCPUs are a requirement I’ve seen multiple installations where a single vCPU was more than sufficient. Another argument for starting with a single vCPU would be “Practice What You Preach”. (How many times have you convinced an application owner to downscale after a P2V?!) I do however personally prefer to always use a 64Bit OS to enable upgrades to configs with more than 4GB of memory when needed.

vCenter Server in a HA/DRS Cluster

  1. Disable DRS(Change Automation Level!) for your vCenter Server and make sure to document where the vCenter Server is located (My suggestion would be the first ESX host on the cluster).
  2. Make sure HA is enabled for your vCenter Server, and set the startup priority to high. (Default is medium for every VM.)
  3. Make sure the vCenter Server VM gets enough resources by setting the shares for both Memory and CPU to “high”.
  4. Make sure other services and servers on which vCenter depends are also starting automatically, with a high priority and in the correct order like:
    1. Active Directory.
    2. DNS.
    3. SQL.
  5. Write a procedure to boot the vCenter / AD / DNS / SQL manually in case of a complete power outage occurs.

Most of these recommendations are pretty obvious but you would be surprised how many environments I’ve seen where for instance MS SQL had a medium startup priority and vCenter a high priority. Or where after a complete power outage no one knows how to boot the vCenter Server. Documenting standard procedures is key here; especially know that with vSphere vCenter is more important than ever before.

Source:
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1009080

http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1009039
ESX and vCenter Server Installation Guide
Upgrade Guide

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About the author

Duncan Epping is a Chief Technologist in the Office of CTO of the Cloud Platform BU at VMware. He is a VCDX (# 007), the author of the "vSAN Deep Dive", the “vSphere Clustering Technical Deep Dive” series, and the host of the "Unexplored Territory" podcast.

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