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PowerCLI Cookbook

You're reading from   PowerCLI Cookbook Over 75 step-by-step recipes to put PowerCLI into action for efficient administration of your virtual environment

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784393724
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Philip Brandon Sellers Philip Brandon Sellers
Author Profile Icon Philip Brandon Sellers
Philip Brandon Sellers
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring the Basic Settings of an ESXi Host with PowerCLI FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring vCenter and Computing Clusters 3. Managing Virtual Machines 4. Working with Datastores and Datastore Clusters 5. Creating and Managing Snapshots 6. Managing Resource Pools, Reservations, and Limits for Virtual Machines 7. Creating Custom Reports and Notifications for vSphere 8. Performing ESXCLI and in-guest Commands from PowerCLI 9. Managing DRS and Affinity Groups using PowerCLI 10. Working with vCloud Director from PowerCLI A. Setting up and Configuring vCloud Director Index

Locating thin or thick provisioned disks


In the early version of ESXi, all VMDKs were thick provisioned disks, which means that all of the data sections of the disk were preallocated onto the backend storage. Thick provisioned disks can be inefficient, especially when there is a large amount of white space or unused space inside of the disk. For instance, if you have a 100 GB disk and only 21 GB is actually used by the guest operating system, you've lost 79 GB of usable disk space in your datastore that could be used by other virtual machines. As storage in vSphere evolved, and as virtualization matured, the concept of thin provisioned disks was introduced in vSphere.

Thin provisioning is the concept of allocating only the data sections of a disk that have data and not allocating any zeroed out sections of the disk. Thin provisioning can save a tremendous amount of backend storage since most virtual machines include some free space. Since the free space is not allocated, the use of thin disks...

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