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Building VMware Software-Defined Data Centers

You're reading from   Building VMware Software-Defined Data Centers Make the most of software-defined data centers with revolutionary VMware technologies

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786464378
Length 358 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Valentin Hamburger Valentin Hamburger
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Valentin Hamburger
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Software-Defined Data Center FREE CHAPTER 2. Identify Automation and Standardization Opportunities 3. VMware vSphere: The SDDC Foundation 4. SDDC Design Considerations 5. VMware vRealize Automation 6. vRealize Orchestrator 7. Service Catalog Creation 8. Network Virtualization using NSX 9. DevOps Considerations 10. Capacity Management with vRealize Operations 11. Troubleshooting and Monitoring 12. Continuous Improvement

The payload cluster

The main principle of an SDDC is to share workloads on a general purpose infrastructure. This is done by using logical software constructs to create the impression that a select area is providing resources for deployed application. Typically, this can be done by either creating own clusters to host different use cases, or by creating resource pools to carve out resources and performance from a bigger cluster.

vSphere provides high flexibility in what technique to use, but there are differences, pros and cons with each approach.

The resource pool approach

Resource pools are one option in vSphere to reserve and limit resources. They also offer shares to ensure a fair prioritization of CPU and memory. Resource pools can be used to create a tiering approach for different workloads. They can also be used to separate workload classes from each other. Some organizations use resource pools to separate test/dev from production workloads. The resource pools act as a resource broker...

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