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VMware vSphere 6.5 Cookbook

You're reading from   VMware vSphere 6.5 Cookbook Over 140 task-oriented recipes to install, configure, manage, and orchestrate various VMware vSphere 6.5 components

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787127418
Length 574 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Mathias Meyenburg Mathias Meyenburg
Author Profile Icon Mathias Meyenburg
Mathias Meyenburg
Cedric Rajendran Cedric Rajendran
Author Profile Icon Cedric Rajendran
Cedric Rajendran
Abhilash G B Abhilash G B
Author Profile Icon Abhilash G B
Abhilash G B
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

1. Upgrading to vSphere 6.5 FREE CHAPTER 2. Greenfield Deployment of vSphere 6.5 3. Using vSphere Host Profiles 4. Using ESXi Image Builder 5. Using vSphere Auto Deploy 6. Using vSphere Standard Switches 7. Using vSphere Distributed Switches 8. Creating and Managing VMFS Datastore 9. Managing Access to the iSCSI and NFS Storage 10. Storage IO Control, Storage DRS, and Profile Driven Storage 11. Creating and Managing Virtual Machines 12. Configuring vSphere 6.5 High Availability 13. Configuring vSphere DRS, DPM, and VMware EVC 14. Upgrading and Patching using vSphere Update Manager 15. Using vSphere Certificate Manager Utility 16. Using vSphere Management Assistant 17. Performance Monitoring in a vSphere Environment 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Enabling Storage I/O Control (SIOC)

The use of disk shares will work just fine as long as the datastore is seen by a single ESXi host. Unfortunately, that is not a common case. Datastores are often shared among multiple ESXi hosts. When datastores are shared, you bring in more than one local host scheduler into the process of balancing the I/O among the virtual machines. However, these lost host schedules cannot talk to each other and their visibility is limited to the ESXi hosts they are running on. This easily contributes to a serious problem called the noisy neighbor situation:

The job of SIOC is to enable some form of communication between local host schedulers so that I/O can be balanced between virtual machines running on separate hosts. We will learn more about how SIOC functions in the How it works... section of this recipe. Before that, we will learn how to enable SIOC...

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