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vSphere High Performance Cookbook

You're reading from   vSphere High Performance Cookbook A cookbook is the ideal way to learn a tool as complex as vSphere. Through experiencing the real-world recipes in this tutorial you'll gain deep insight into vSphere's unique attributes and reach a high level of proficiency.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782170006
Length 240 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Prasenjit Sarkar Prasenjit Sarkar
Author Profile Icon Prasenjit Sarkar
Prasenjit Sarkar
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

vSphere High Performance Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. CPU Performance Design 2. Memory Performance Design FREE CHAPTER 3. Networking Performance Design 4. DRS, SDRS, and Resource Control Design 5. vSphere Cluster Design 6. Storage Performance Design 7. Designing vCenter and vCenter Database for Best Performance 8. Virtual Machine and Application Performance Design Index

Rightly choosing the vSphere HA cluster size


With vSphere 5, we have seen a significant change in the HA model and that does relax the constraint on the size of your vSphere HA cluster. But, you may ask, what about storage bottlenecks while accessing the same storage by a large cluster? We have VAAI to handle that now, and that being in picture does not constrain you from choosing a large cluster.

Also a crucial factor is that large cluster creates more scheduling opportunities for DRS and a bigger cluster does not impose a heavy lift on the cost. Does that mean, we suggest "ONLY" bigger cluster and not many smaller clusters? Well, not really. It all boils down to what you are going to use on that cluster, and what is your requirement. If you are implementing View Manager and are going to use Linked Clone then you are limiting yourself with eight hosts, as with Linked Clone only eight hosts can access one single file. This restriction is not there in vSphere 5.1.

There are a few other factors...

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