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Microsoft Hyper-V Cluster Design

You're reading from   Microsoft Hyper-V Cluster Design To achieve a Windows Server system that virtually takes care of itself, you need to master Hyper-V cluster design. This book is the perfect tutorial on the subject, providing clear instruction on expanding into the virtualized environment.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2013
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782177685
Length 462 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Eric Siron Eric Siron
Author Profile Icon Eric Siron
Eric Siron
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hyper-V Cluster Orientation FREE CHAPTER 2. Cluster Design and Planning 3. Constructing a Hyper-V Server Cluster 4. Storage Design 5. Network Design 6. Network Traffic Shaping and Performance Enhancements 7. Memory Planning and Management 8. Performance Testing and Load Balancing 9. Special Cases 10. Maintaining and Monitoring a Hyper-V Server Cluster 11. High Availability 12. Backup and Disaster Recovery Index

Hyper-V Server storage performance

In most cases, storage performance will primarily be a concern for the VHDX files. Most other operations are occasional and short-lived.

The simplest (and most common) recommendation is to always use fixed VHDX files on RAID-10 systems. If you can afford it, this will certainly result in the best performance. However, a better recommendation is to understand the sort of performance that your Hyper-V Server cluster will require and ensure that your storage can provide at least that amount. Chapter 2, Cluster Design and Planning, covered using the MAP tool to assess your existing environment. If you explore other areas, it can also help you plan to deploy other Microsoft applications. So, if your measured and projected workload will need no more than a few hundred IOPS, there is little sense in building an oversized system to deliver thousands.

Pass-through disks

A technology that was widely used in older Hyper-V Server versions, but is rapidly falling out...

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