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Troubleshooting vSphere Storage

You're reading from   Troubleshooting vSphere Storage All vSphere administrators will benefit big-time from this book because it gives you clear, practical instructions on troubleshooting a whole host of storage problems. From fundamental to advanced techniques, it's all here.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782172062
Length 150 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Mike Preston Mike Preston
Author Profile Icon Mike Preston
Mike Preston
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Toc

Storage virtualization


ESXi presents its storage to a VM using host-level storage virtualization techniques which essentially provide an abstraction layer between the actual physical storage, whether that is attached via a Storage Area Network (SAN), an Ethernet network or locally installed, and the virtual machines consuming the storage. This abstraction layer consists of many different components all working together to simulate that of a physical disk inside a virtual machine.

When a virtual machine is created, it will normally have at least one virtual disk assigned to it. When a virtual disk is assigned to a VM, a piece of virtual hardware called a virtual storage adapter is created in order to facilitate the communication between the VM and its underlying virtual hard disk (vmdk). The type of virtual storage adapter that is used greatly depends on the Guest Operating System setting that has been chosen for that specific VM (see the following table). This newly created SCSI adapter provides the interface between the OS and the VMkernel module on the ESXi host. The VMkernel module then locates the target file within the volume, maps the blocks from the virtual disk to the physical device, forwards the request through the Pluggable Storage Architecture, and finally queues the appropriate adapter on the ESXi host depending on the type of storage present (iSCSI NIC/Hardware Initiator, Fibre Channel Host Bus Adapters (FC HBA), NFS – NIC, or Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE NIC/CNA)).

The following table outlines the various virtual SCSI adapters available:

Virtual SCSI adapter

Supported VM hardware version

Description

OS support

BusLogic Parallel

4,7,8,9,10

Emulates the BusLogic Parallel SCSI adapter. Mainly available for older operating systems.

Default for most Linux operating systems.

LSI Logic Parallel

4,7,8,9,10

Emulates the LSI Logic Parallel SCSI adapter. Supported by most new operating systems.

Default for Windows 2003/2003 R2.

LSI Logic SAS

7,8,9,10

Emulates the LSI Logic SAS adapter. Supported on most new operating systems.

Default for Windows 2008/2008 R2/2012.

VMware Paravirtual SCSI (PVSCSI)

7,8,9,10

Purposely built to provide high throughput with a lower CPU overhead. Supported on select newer operating systems.

No defaults, but is supported with Windows 2003+, SUSE 11+, Ubuntu 10.04+, and RHEL6+.

You have been reading a chapter from
Troubleshooting vSphere Storage
Published in: Nov 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781782172062
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