DCMA-0273 Next-Gen Virtualization 2.0 For Dummies Ebook
DCMA-0273 Next-Gen Virtualization 2.0 For Dummies Ebook
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
Next-Gen
Vir tualization
VMware Special Edition
by Himanshu Singh
and Martin Yip
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Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies®, VMware Special Edition
Published by
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774
www.wiley.com
Copyright © 2017 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey
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Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION................................................................................................ 1
About This Book.................................................................................... 1
Foolish Assumptions............................................................................. 2
Icons Used in This Book........................................................................ 2
Where to Go from Here........................................................................ 3
Table of Contents v
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CHAPTER 4: Going Beyond Server Virtualization............................ 31
Looking at Virtualized Storage........................................................... 31
Reinventing the storage model.................................................... 32
How hyper-converged infrastructure works.............................. 32
Understanding Virtualized Networking............................................ 33
How network virtualization works............................................... 33
Network virtualization versus software-defined
networking...................................................................................... 34
Cloud Management Platform....................................................... 35
Considering Software-Defined Data Centers................................... 36
SDDC in a box................................................................................. 36
SDDC as a Service.......................................................................... 37
APPENDIX: RESOURCES............................................................................ 57
Watch Videos....................................................................................... 57
Join the Online Discussion.................................................................. 59
Dive into the Product Details............................................................. 59
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Introduction
W
hy do you need a modern virtualization platform?
Basically for the same reason you need a smartphone.
Digital transformation is sweeping across all indus-
tries, and you need the right technology to capitalize on this wave.
Don’t let the small size fool you. This book is loaded with infor-
mation that can help you understand and capitalize on virtualiza-
tion technologies to build your modern cloud platform. In plain
and simple language, we explain what a next-generation virtu-
alization and cloud platform is, why you need it, and what capa-
bilities to look for when building one. We also offer tips and best
practices to consider as you head down the road toward a modern
virtualization platform and a hybrid cloud world.
Introduction 1
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Foolish Assumptions
In writing this book, we’ve gone out on a limb and made some
assumptions about you. We assume the following:
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Where to Go from Here
We wrote this book as a reference guide, so you can read it from
cover to cover or jump straight to the topics you’re most inter-
ested in. Whichever way you choose, you can’t go wrong. Both
paths lead to the same outcome — a better understanding of the
characteristics of a modern virtualization platform and the steps
and best practice to consider as you move forward.
Introduction 3
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4 Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies, VMware Special Edition
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Highlighting market trends
Chapter 1
Considering the Rise of
the Digital Economy
T
o understand the importance of next-gen virtualization to
your organization, you first need to understand how the
digital economy is playing an ever-increasing role in
modern society. This expanding role is fundamentally changing
how corporations need to plan for the future so that they aren’t
left behind as commerce evolves.
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In this new application-driven world, digitally driven startup
companies like Airbnb and Uber have become global powerhouses
seemingly overnight. Along the way, companies like them are
changing the ground rules for their industries.
Of course, it’s not just the young upstarts that are fueling the
growth of the digital economy. Well-entrenched companies are
also rethinking their business models and investing heavily in soft-
ware, data, and analytics. General Electric, for example, is probably
best known as a hardware manufacturer. But GE has set the goal
to become a top-ten software company and already has become a
recognized leader in software for the Internet of Things (IoT).
And at this point, things get harder. In many IT shops, the route
to a faster, more agile data center is riddled with roadblocks:
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»» Out-dated architecture: With current architectures, there is
no easy way for you to offer services seamlessly and securely
across traditional infrastructure, on-premises private clouds,
and public clouds.
Challenges like these point to the need for some serious rethink-
ing of IT architectures and processes. In particular, your orga-
nization needs to move to an agile, service-oriented model that
is based on a flexible software-defined data center (SDDC) that
leverages both private and public clouds.
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8 Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies, VMware Special Edition
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Introducing virtualization
Chapter 2
It All Begins with
Virtualization
A
t the most fundamental level, the transformation of your
business to compete in the new digital economy begins
with virtualization.
Understanding Virtualization
Virtualization creates a software representation of the underlying
hardware and enables you to run multiple virtual machines on
top of a single host. Each virtual machine has its own operating
system and application running inside. By doing so, virtualization
enables much higher levels of utilization and efficiency.
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are not just inefficient; they’re downright wasteful. Virtualization
fixes this problem.
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»» Hosted hypervisors: Commonly called Type 2 hypervisors,
these are installed as virtual workstations on top of a server’s
existing operating system, such as Windows Server, Linux, or
a custom operating system. The host OS has direct access to
network resources and hardware, and manages OS connec-
tions to those resources. The hosted hypervisor coordinates
calls between the VM and the resources it needs to access,
including CPU, memory, storage, and the network.
Cost savings
Right out of the gate, IT organizations turn to virtualization to
cut costs. The virtualization of resources leads to increased
utilization, reduction in numbers of servers (as well as the
associated power and cooling requirements), and more efficient use
of valuable data center floor space. And those are just the savings
in capital expenses (CAPEX). Virtualization also drives a wide
range of operating expense (OPEX) benefits, such as increasing IT
productivity, simplifying management tasks, and enabling higher
levels of automation.
Higher availability
Virtualization enables higher levels of availability by making it
easy to keep workloads running in the event of both planned and
unplanned downtime. Virtualization gives you a level of con-
trol and flexibility that would not be possible with hardwired
resources dedicated to specific applications.
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zero-downtime live migration of a workload from New York City
to London. This capability completely changes the way data cen-
ters are planned out because they can now be further apart but
still satisfy disaster avoidance requirements.
Centralized administration
When infrastructure resources are virtualized, they can all be
monitored and managed from a single console. With the right
virtualization management tools in place, you can easily pro-
vision and deploy virtual machines, manage security settings,
move workloads around, and ensure that resources are optimally
utilized in your data center. You can do so without continually
switching back and forth between different interfaces.
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Better still, with centralized management of virtualized hosts and
virtual machines from a single console, you gain deep visibility
into the configuration of the critical components of your virtual
infrastructure. A single administrator might now be able to man-
age hundreds of workloads, more than doubling typical produc-
tivity levels when managing physical infrastructure.
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14 Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies, VMware Special Edition
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Introducing the universal application
platform
Chapter 3
Key Characteristics of
Next-Gen Virtualization
A
key point about next-gen virtualization is that it provides
one unifying platform that is designed to do many things.
And, like today’s digitally driven world, it all starts with
applications.
Looking at a Universal
Application Platform
As the momentum for digital transformation grows, you need to
support an ever-widening range of next-gen applications. Gone
are the days when your IT team could focus mainly on tradi-
tional business-critical applications. In the new world, next-gen
applications are becoming just as important as those used to run
traditional businesses.
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We’re keeping the discussion at a general level, but it’s worth not-
ing that you can find all the characteristics discussed here in the
latest generation of the VMware vSphere product suite, including
vSphere with Operations Management. The vSphere product suite
is designed specifically to enable next-gen virtualization for the
digital business.
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on the need to develop apps faster, be more resilient, and offer
a better user experience. Next-gen virtualization enables your
software developers to rapidly deliver the infrastructure for con-
nected micro-services, as well as any other workloads that you
run in your data center or from a cloud.
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Understanding Key Platform
Characteristics
There are a number of important characteristics you’ll want to
look for in a next-gen virtualization platform. The following
sections provide an overview of these attributes. A fully featured
virtualization platform has all these characteristics.
Simplicity
In today’s corporate IT environments, new apps are coming online
all the time — apps that need to be maintained, supported, and
secured. And it’s not just more apps; it’s also more complex apps.
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Modern platforms should also empower the administrator to see
and do more in less time via dashboard views that offer holistic
and deep visibility into the environment and provide quick access
to key functionality for specific tasks. These same dashboards
should be easily sharable within and across teams, for empowered
collaboration.
Streamlined administration
A next-gen virtualization platform streamlines and centralizes
management of your virtualized infrastructure — both virtualized
hosts and virtual machines. It gives you simple and automated
control over your entire virtual environment, including deep
visibility into the configuration and operation of the critical
components of your virtual infrastructure.
Automation
To support business growth and the rapid deployment of new ser-
vices, a future-ready virtualization platform couples a simplified
user experience with automation at scale. The goal is to safely
automate management of infrastructure with features for guided
remediation, fine-grained controls, policies, and customizable
actions.
Automation isn’t bolted on. It’s built into the virtualization plat-
form and often enacted through application programming inter-
faces (APIs) to help you easily accomplish tasks and maintain a
performant environment with little or no intervention and time
spent. Automation allows your IT teams to work where they add
most value — and have the power to say “yes” to your business
more often.
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Resilience
A modern virtualization platform incorporates built-in features
to help ensure the availability and recoverability of virtualized
workloads. The goal is to ensure that data is always available and
that applications and services are not interrupted when infra-
structure fails.
Policy-driven
In a fully virtualized environment, policy-driven automation
simplifies the provisioning and ongoing management of logical
compute, storage, and network services. Policy-driven approaches
enable IT agility and efficiency. They help you attain new levels
of infrastructure utilization and staff productivity, reducing both
CAPEX and OPEX.
Intelligence
In a digital economy, business units expect the IT organization to
deliver new services at unprecedented speeds. Although that’s a
great goal, speed at any cost isn’t an option. Typically, IT teams
must address the need for speed within existing budgets and
staffing.
At the same time, this isn’t just about the performance and reli-
ability of your IT services. It’s also about economics. To contain
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costs, an intelligent virtualization platform supports policy-
driven governance capabilities to help ensure you’re using your
resources efficiently on an ongoing basis.
Insights
Your IT teams need meaningful insights — all in one place, across
the whole stack, leveraging all types of monitoring data — so you
can work proactively to optimize your virtualized environment.
Better insights lead to better IT. That’s why a next-gen virtu-
alization platform incorporates intelligent operations manage-
ment capabilities that adapt to your environment and give you
the insights you need to identify and remediate issues before they
impact users.
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Health and performance management
A modern business can’t tolerate system downtime or poor appli-
cation performance. This reality of the digital economy means
that IT teams need to work proactively to enable higher perfor-
mance and availability for infrastructure and applications — long
before end users report issues.
Capacity optimization
To help your IT organization become more efficient in resource
utilization and deliver better application performance, a modern
virtualization platform incorporates intelligent capacity optimi-
zation capabilities, including tools that help you right-size work-
loads and reclaim unused capacity.
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Capacity planning
Every IT administrator could benefit from a crystal ball that pro-
vides a clear view of what lies ahead. That’s basically the idea of
the capacity planning tools incorporated in a next-gen virtualiza-
tion platform.
Risk avoidance
Predictive analytics capabilities in a comprehensive virtualization
platform help you mitigate the risk of poorly performing business
services by proactively identifying emerging issues.
Visibility
A modern virtualization platform gives you comprehensive vis-
ibility into your IT environment from a single vantage point: your
management console. This view is enriched by analytics capabili-
ties that call your attention to issues your team needs to focus on
in order to maintain the health and improve the efficiency of your
virtualized environment.
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Storage analytics provide deep visibility into your virtualized
storage resources to help your administrators easily identify con-
figuration errors, resource starvation, and emerging performance
issues.
INTEGRATING FEATURES TO
PREVENT PROBLEMS
The Predictive DRS capability in vSphere with Operations Management
integrates self-learning and predictive analytics from VMware vRealize
Operations with the resource scheduling algorithm of vSphere DRS.
Together, they deliver predictive workload balancing for certain VMs
before resource demand spikes occur, eliminating resource conten-
tion before it occurs.
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To guide intelligent workload placement, the next-gen virtu-
alization platform shows you how your workloads are utilized
across your data centers, clusters, and hosts, and where you have
resource contention. But it doesn’t stop there. It also provides
recommendations on cross-cluster placement opportunities, as
well as the best destination within clusters.
Security
In an age of highly sophisticated attacks on corporate systems,
security threats have emerged as a top IT and business prior-
ity. To ward off cyber-crime and protect the business, security
must be comprehensive and ingrained. It should be enabled at the
foundation of the IT architecture and deployed across the entire IT
environment, not just in one component or layer. Comprehensive
built-in security should span and protect the data, infrastructure,
and access layers.
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For example, consider these features offered in vSphere:
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Support for hybrid environments
A next-gen virtualization platform is designed from the ground
up to support hybrid cloud environments. It allows you to run,
manage, connect, and secure your applications across multiple
private and public clouds and devices — including apps running
natively on leading public clouds.
Consistent management
Virtualization rises to a higher level with the addition of capa-
bilities for simplified, consistent, and centralized operations
management across the virtualized data center. To that end, a
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comprehensive virtualization platform embeds purpose-built
management software that helps you improve the performance,
availability, and efficiency of your infrastructure and applications.
Features to look for include the following:
DevOps
As organizations move down the digital transformation path,
momentum is growing for the use of DevOps processes, which
orchestrate the work of developers and IT operations personnel.
IDC predicts that by 2018, 45 percent of CIOs will focus on plat-
formization, using DevOps for rapid development, cost reduction,
and enterprise agility.
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A next-gen virtualization platform facilitates DevOps processes
to accelerate the development, testing, and release of software
applications and updates.
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Chapter 4 looks at capabilities that go beyond server virtualiza-
tion. For now, take note of the following key takeaway points. A
robust next-gen virtualization platform
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Virtualizing storage, networking, and
security
Chapter 4
Going Beyond Server
Virtualization
A
fter you’ve adopted a robust, next-gen virtualization
platform, you’re ready to take things to a higher level. You
have the foundation for virtualized storage, virtualized
networking, and a cloud management platform, all of which move
you forward on the path to the software-defined data center
(SDDC).
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Reinventing the storage model
SDS reinvents the storage model by eliminating legacy silos and
enabling the true pooling of storage resources. The hypervisor
brings to storage the same operational efficiency that server vir-
tualization brings to compute.
To enable this shift, SDS puts the application and its require-
ments at the top of the IT food chain, enabling storage resources
to respond to the dynamic changes in application requirements.
Now the application is the boss and the supporting resources are
the workers who make sure the boss gets what the boss needs
when the boss needs it.
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attached to the x86 servers, and incorporating them as part of the
virtualized environment.
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via a software representation of a physical network “wire.” This
allows for the entire network to be created in software.
In other words, SDN doesn’t allow you to run the entire network in
software. Hardware remains the driving force for the network.
In contrast to SDN, network virtualization completely decouples
network resources from the underlying hardware. All networking
components and functions are faithfully replicated in software.
Virtualization principles are applied to physical network infra-
structure to create a flexible pool of transport capacity that can be
allocated, used, and repurposed on demand.
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SDN allows you to control network switches and routers through
software. It doesn’t virtualize all networking functions and com-
ponents. Network virtualization replicates all networking compo-
nents and functions in software and allows you to run the entire
network in software.
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»» Day-two capabilities: Give you the ability to fully manage
changes to the service stack, including everything from
right-sizing to retirement along with the ability to fully
address quality-of-service requirements associated with the
running service.
Considering Software-Defined
Data Centers
Public cloud services can be a good fit for many applications, but
company-owned data centers continue to play a critical role in
enterprise IT, especially for those mission-critical applications
that require greater control and security. As a result, many orga-
nizations are looking to shift to a more agile, service-oriented IT
model that leverages both private and public clouds. The SDDC
lays the foundation for this hybrid approach to IT.
SDDC in a box
In an SDDC, compute, storage, and networking services are decou-
pled from underlying hardware infrastructure and abstracted into
logical pools of resources that can be more flexibly provisioned
and managed. That’s all good, of course, but it’s not a simple
undertaking to build an SDDC. This is where the concept of the
“SDDC in a box” enters the picture.
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a fast route to the business agility, scalability, and operational
efficiency of web-scale cloud service providers.
SDDC as a Service
SDDC as a Service takes things a step further. This approach offers
a fully integrated SDDC software stack via a public cloud, such as
Amazon Web Services (AWS) and IBM Cloud. Basically, SDDC as a
Service takes the fully virtualized cloud foundation from a private
cloud and makes it available via a public cloud.
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38 Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies, VMware Special Edition
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Getting started with your modern
virtualization platform
Chapter 5
Next-Gen Virtualization
Preflight
W
hen a virtual environment is firing on all cylinders, it
drives down costs and minimizes downtime while
increasing productivity. Unfortunately, many businesses
undercut those gains before deployment by incurring costs and
causing downtime in the earliest stages of the shift from physical
to virtual.
This is a case where a little planning goes a long way. This chapter
discusses some things to consider before you begin your migra-
tion. Know what to expect and you can plan accordingly.
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application owners, finance personnel, and other stakeholders.
It’s important to have a range of perspectives to make sure your
virtualization strategy aligns with business priorities. As you
move forward, this team will also help you demonstrate how cost
savings and improved service levels in the data center affect the
rest of the organization.
Assemble a detailed plan that outlines the full scope of the project
and its phases. Work with your finance team members to deter-
mine total cost of ownership (TCO) and your projected return
on investment (ROI). If you need new hardware such as servers,
storage arrays, or networking gear, put it in the budget.
Before you roll out the new virtual environment, allow time to
test it thoroughly. Record baseline performance on your current
servers and applications. It’s important to have this data before
migration begins so you can benchmark VM performance gains
against native performance levels. This helps justify the project
for management buy-in.
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»» Traditional external storage-area network (SAN) or
network-attached storage (NAS) array: Compared to
virtual storage, a SAN or NAS solution can be more expen-
sive and require more technical expertise because it needs
specialized hardware and IT staff. For organizations with
available capital and larger IT environments, traditional
arrays provide deduplication, array-based replication, and
unified storage offerings (for example, NFS, iSCSI, Fiber
Channel).
»» Virtual storage: This option is simpler than SAN and NAS
because you don’t need to purchase, configure, or maintain
an external hardware array. For businesses that need shared
storage but do not need all the features of an enterprise
storage solution, a solution such as VMware vSAN can save
capital expenses and ongoing management costs.
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»» Take advantage of the storage efficiencies of virtualiza-
tion. For example, on a traditional physical server, adding or
reconfiguring disk drives is difficult, time consuming,
constrained by available drive bays, and can sometimes
result in downtime or data loss. In a virtual environment,
physical storage devices are abstracted — separated — from
the virtual machine, so storage capacity can be added
without affecting the VM in any way. Virtual disks, by the
same token, can be easily expanded without requiring
complex reconfiguration of physical storage devices.
»» Choose thin or thick provisioning of virtual disks for
individual VMs. Thick provisioning allocates all the space for
a virtual disk the moment you create it; thin provisioning
allocates space as necessary throughout the virtual disk’s
life. If you have a dedicated storage solution from a third
party, thin provisioning may be available at the array
hardware level as well.
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environment. Isolated management networks provide
higher security while preventing VM traffic from interfering
with management traffic.
»» You need to balance VM protection with performance by
scheduling security scans and other checks for off hours.
Also, consider using features built into vSphere, such as
VMware vShield Endpoint, which offloads antivirus and
antimalware processes. This approach can also lower the
risk of antivirus “storms” by centralizing those functions.
»» Define affinity rules for your VMs. For example, you can
define host affinity rules to keep VMs together, so a web
server VM and its associated app and database VM are kept
on the same physical server for high-speed virtual network
connectivity. You can also define anti-affinity rules. For
example, you can keep multiple database servers on
separate hosts so if a physical host fails, other database VMs
will keep running.
»» Determine whether your applications must reside on
specific hardware for compliance or process reasons.
»» Make sure you determine the recovery time objective
(RTO) and recovery point objective (RPO) for each
workload. That way, when you’re creating your business
continuity and disaster recovery plans, your backup and
recovery policies are aligned with your business priorities.
As the saying goes, those who ignore history are doomed to repeat
it. By monitoring performance issues, resource shortfalls, and
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other historical data on your VMs, you can anticipate future spikes
in memory and CPU usage, and plan accordingly so critical appli-
cations do not hit capacity limits. The tools of a modern virtual-
ization platform make it easy to monitor and analyze workloads
and diagnose problems, so you can keep your business-critical
applications and VMs operating at peak performance.
Before you deploy, there are several things you need to know:
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out-of-the-box policies included in vSphere with Operations
Management that will meet most of your business needs (for
example, production or test environments, batch or interac-
tive workloads) or create your own personalized policies.
»» Configure badges for quick health checks. Badges are a
visual representation of infrastructure assets, providing
scores and metrics that show the health, risk, and efficiency
of the virtual environment and monitored objects. Badge
thresholds should be customized based on your environ-
ment’s size and unique requirements. Badges are assigned a
numerical value ranging from 0 to 100 and are color-coded
depending on the thresholds defined. It’s a single, integrated,
real-time status indicator for all virtual infrastructure
resources, allowing IT admins to more easily monitor the
virtual environment.
»» Identify the needs of workgroups to configure capacity
settings. Every workgroup has different needs at different
times. A production team working on a product launch might
need to be over-provisioned for a few months with extra
CPU and storage. A development and test environment
might be fine with high-density, over-committed VMs and
resources. With accurate capacity analysis, you can account
for varying business needs and tap your massive pool of
resources so every workgroup has what it needs.
»» Choose how you want to be alerted. Smart alerts let you
choose how you want to be notified by your management
platform when a problem is developing. vRealize Operations
learns typical behavior in your environment, so it provides
fewer, more meaningful alerts that let you know when there
really is a problem — for example, when a dynamic thresh-
old is exceeded or an anomaly is detected. Similar to
capacity settings, alerts are configured based on policies that
you define. Alerts also provide actionable recommendations
so you can find and fix problems fast, before they cause
downtime.
»» Set up email notifications for administrative alerts. To
monitor data center health and capacity from anywhere,
configure an optional SMTP server to activate email service
for notification messages when problems occur. You can set
email notifications for all types of alerts, so you can address
problems as they happen in real time, minimizing downtime.
For administrators, it’s especially important to set up email
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notifications for administrative alerts to ensure vRealize
Operations is always running properly.
»» Schedule reports to help address bottlenecks before
they occur. Use reports in vRealize Operations to monitor
capacity and performance in the vSphere environment and
to help avoid bottlenecks. It’s a good idea to schedule
reports for regular intervals — weekly, monthly, quarterly,
whatever makes sense for your business. You can also pull
reports on demand for a real-time snapshot of the IT
environment, and use historical reports to track growth
patterns and anticipate future capacity needs. Detailed
reporting is one of the most under-appreciated aspects of a
virtual environment, and one of the best tools to continu-
ously improve performance and efficiency.
»» Unify your view of the virtual environment. Use the
dashboard super metrics to quickly recognize areas that
need attention and look deeper into individual components
of the environment when necessary. The consolidated
dashboard helps you ensure that resources are being used
efficiently and that all systems are performing and available,
all from a single view that allows you to spend less time
monitoring and more time optimizing. With this dashboard,
you get a holistic view and deep insights into the health, risk,
and efficiency of infrastructure and applications to help
ensure quality of service and early detection of performance,
capacity, and configuration issues.
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IN THIS CHAPTER
»» Highlighting tips, techniques, and
insights
Chapter 6
Ten Best Practices
for Your Next-Gen
Virtualization Platform
W
hether you’re planning to virtualize your data center
for the first time or optimize what’s already in place,
these tips, techniques, and insights from the trenches
can improve performance, as well as increase your return on
investment.
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»» Make sure your BIOS settings are configured correctly for
the hypervisor software. First, make sure you’re running the
latest version of the BIOS and that it’s set to enable all
populated processor sockets and all cores in each socket.
Enable turbo boost, hyper-threading, and any hardware-
assisted virtualization features that are available. Disable any
devices you won’t be using, such as serial, USB, or network
ports. If the BIOS allows memory scrubbing to be configured,
leave it at the manufacturer’s default setting.
»» Verify that you have the latest recommended drivers from
your server vendor. Many server manufacturers provide
OEM customized installer CDs for VMware ESXi that include
recommended drivers for VMware ESXi.
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Configuring Back-End Storage
Devices Correctly
Back-end storage affects front-end performance. Many work-
loads are very sensitive to I/O throughput, so if performance
problems crop up, the culprit is often storage configuration. The
right configuration for your environment will depend on work-
loads, hardware, vendors, RAID level, cache size, stripe size, and
more. Consult your hypervisor and storage documentation for
details, but in general:
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»» Make sure storage adapter cards are installed in slots that
have adequate bandwidth for the I/O traffic they’ll be
carrying.
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»» Configure your virtual switches to match settings on your
physical switches, including MTU Size (Jumbo Frames),
and speed.
»» Finally, connect your hypervisor hosts to the physical
network and test end-to-end connectivity.
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Performance-Tuning for Latency-
Sensitive Workloads
Virtualized environments can be configured to improve perfor-
mance of applications that are highly sensitive to latency. To
accommodate those workloads:
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complex learning algorithms to “learn” your environment, so
it may take some time for those algorithms to accurately
differentiate normal behavior from anomalies and send
smart alerts only for real problems.
»» Adjust thresholds for your management platform to match
your organization’s requirements, service-level agreements
(SLAs), and performance expectations. Build dashboards to
show your business groups how you’re providing greater
uptime and performance while improving the bottom line by
managing capacity and efficiency in your virtual data center.
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»» Consider configuring your guest OS to use NTP, Windows
Time Service, the VMware Tools time-synchronization option,
or other time-keeping utility.
»» Configure virtualization-aware backups that enable you to
complete full-image backups that include the running state
of the VM at the time the backup was taken. Determine
which VMs will use your virtualization platform’s object-level
backup and restore capabilities to achieve greater granular-
ity for data protection. Implement a backup schedule using
your newfound backup powers to deliver the RTOs, RPOs,
and SLAs that your business needs instead of just offering
whatever your old backup solution was able to provide.
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»» Model the impact of adding additional workloads to your
environment using capacity planning tools. This process will
help you determine your risk of running out of physical
resources and proactively identify the right amount of
physical resources to add to your environment for planned
expansions.
»» Use your operations management tools to run efficiency
reports that identify opportunities to reclaim waste. An
efficient data center has less risk. Less risk means better
health and performance.
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56 Next-Gen Virtualization For Dummies, VMware Special Edition
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IN THIS APPENDIX
»» Highlighting resources
Appendix
Resources
R
eady for a deeper dive into the concepts and technologies
embodied in a modern virtualization platform? Immerse
yourself in our recommendations for resources that will
enrich your understanding of the concepts, technologies, and
tools for taking virtualization to a new level.
Watch Videos
Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words, so we’ve found
several videos that will help explain next-gen virtualization and
save you from having to read a bunch of boring technical papers:
APPENDIX Resources 57
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»» vSphere Fast Facts: This series of bite-size videos covers the
top-ten capabilities delivered by vSphere:
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Join the Online Discussion
One of the great things about the Internet is that it provides the
opportunity to connect with people who are experts or who have
encountered the same problems you may be facing. Here are some
places where you can connect with other next-gen virtualization
users:
»» vSphere Blog: Get fresh insights into the latest with the
platform, its capabilities, and its ongoing enhancements
from people who work with the software every day:
https://blogs.vmware.com/vsphere.
»» vSphere Community: Tap into the vast vSphere ecosystem.
Access how-to documents, ask technical questions, and
get direct insights from the user community: https://
communities.vmware.com/community/vmtn/vsphere.
»» vSphere Upgrade and Install Community: Access technical
resources and join the discussion on the details of vSphere
upgrade and installation processes: https://communities.
vmware.com/community/vmtn/vsphere/upgradecenter.
»» VROOM! Performance Blog: Rev up your virtualization
engine with these insights from VMware’s performance
team: https://blogs.vmware.com/performance.
APPENDIX Resources 59
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»» Digital transformation success stories: Learn from the
experiences of vSphere customers. See how you can ramp
up or extend your virtualization journey: www.vmware.com/
content/dam/digitalmarketing/vmware/en/pdf/
products/vsphere/vmware-vsphere-case-study-
ebook.pdf.
»» Hands-on labs: Test-drive the full technical capabilities of
VMware products in these free evaluations that are up and
running on your browser in minutes — with no requirement
for installation: www.vmware.com/go/try-vsom-hol.
»» vSphere and vSphere with Operations Management
Evaluation: Start your 60-day trial of both vSphere and
vSphere with Operations Management. Evaluate the
software in your own environment: www.vmware.com/go/
evaluate-vsphere-en.
»» Product Walkthrough: Click your way through the vSphere
platform, from host life-cycle management capabilities to
security enhancements and new availability, resource
management, and content management features: https://
featurewalkthrough.vmware.com/#!.
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Notes
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
Notes
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
Notes
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
Notes
These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
About the Authors
Himanshu Singh: Himanshu is Group Manager of Product
Marketing for VMware’s Cloud Platform business. His extensive
past experience in the technology industry includes driving cloud
management solutions at VMware, growing the public cloud
business at Microsoft, as well as delivering and managing private
clouds at IBM. He holds a B.Eng. (Hons.) degree from Nanyang
Technological University, Singapore, and an MBA from Tuck
School of Business at Dartmouth College. Follow him on Twitter
at @himanshuks.
Authors’ Acknowledgments
The authors extend their thanks to the subject matter experts on
the VMware Cloud Platform team for their help in pulling together
and reviewing the content in this book. The authors also send
thanks to the writers and editors at the Wire Stone agency and
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., for their assistance with the development
and refinement of the content. In addition, this book leverages
content from the earlier VMware-sponsored Virtualization 2.0
For Dummies, Hyper-Converged Infrastructure For Dummies, and
Network Virtualization For Dummies books, as well as several of the
assets listed in the appendix.
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These materials are © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Any dissemination, distribution, or unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.
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