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Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization

You're reading from   Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Leverage powerful Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization solutions to build your own IaaS cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782167402
Length 178 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Pradeep Subramaniaan Pradeep Subramaniaan
Author Profile Icon Pradeep Subramaniaan
Pradeep Subramaniaan
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Overview of Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing RHEV Manager and Hypervisor Hosts 3. Setting Up the RHEV Virtual Infrastructure 4. Creating and Managing Virtual Machines 5. Virtual Machine and Host High Availability 6. Advanced Storage and Networking Features 7. Quota and User Management 8. Managing a Virtualization Environment from the Command Line 9. Troubleshooting RHEV 10. Setting Up iSCSI, NFS, and IdM Directory Services for RHEV Index

Features of RHEV

With RHEV, you can virtualize even the most demanding application workloads with features including the following:

  • Host scalability: This supports a limit of up to 160 logical CPUs and 2 TB per host (platform capable of up to 4,096 logical CPUs / 64 TB per host)
  • Guest scalability: This supports up to 160 vCPU and 2 TB VRAM per guest
  • KSM memory over commitment: This allows administrators to define more RAM in their VMs than what is present in a physical host
  • Security: This supports SELinux and new sVirt capabilities, including Mandatory Access Control (MAC) for enhanced virtual machine and hypervisor security
  • Management: This provides centralized enterprise-grade virtualization management engines with a graphical administration console and programming interfaces
  • Live migration: This allows running virtual machines to be moved seamlessly from one host to another
  • High availability: This allows critical VMs to be restarted on another host in the event of hardware failure with three levels of priority
  • System scheduler: This provides system scheduler policies for load balancing to automatically balance the VM load among hosts in a cluster
  • Power saver: The power saver mode is used to consolidate VM loads onto fewer hosts during nonpeak hours
  • Maintenance manager: This allows you to move the hypervisor into the maintenance mode for any software or hardware updates of the hypervisor
  • Image management: This supports template-based provisioning, live virtual machine snapshots, and cloning new virtual machines from snapshots
  • Monitoring and reporting: This provides a suite of preconfigured reports and dashboards and creates your own ad hoc reports that enable you to monitor the system
  • OVF import/export: This allows you to import and export Open Virtualization Format (OVF) virtual machines into RHEV
  • V2V: This automates the conversion of the VMware or Xen virtual machine images into an OVF file for use within RHEV
You have been reading a chapter from
Getting Started with Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization
Published in: Sep 2014
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781782167402
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