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    Xenserver and Storage

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    • DustinB3403D
      DustinB3403
      last edited by

      Switching to pure Xen, you lose XAPI which is what makes XenServer useful. Without XAPI tools like Xen Orchestra simply don't exist for the space. At least not to the same extent.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DustinB3403D
        DustinB3403 @jrc
        last edited by

        @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

        Ok, let me take a step back here.

        On the Host you install a VSAN controller VM, you then attach storage to this VM which it will then use as it's VSAN storage space and map that over to the host via iSCSI. Am I correct so far?

        Allright, so with Xenserver, the max attached VHDs would be 16, at 2Tb each. And since this VSAN VM is to be used to home all your VMs on the host, you'd need it to have a fair bit of space. So having roughly a 32Tb limit could be a problem. Does this mean you'd need to have a second VSAN VM in that host, therefore upping that limit to 64Tb? And does the VSAN OS handle spanning the data across all 16 VHDs?

        Where are you getting your limits from? I literally just posted them and did the math on what you could provide as storage to a single VM.

        jrcJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • jrcJ
          jrc @DustinB3403
          last edited by jrc

          @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

          @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

          Ok, let me take a step back here.

          On the Host you install a VSAN controller VM, you then attach storage to this VM which it will then use as it's VSAN storage space and map that over to the host via iSCSI. Am I correct so far?

          Allright, so with Xenserver, the max attached VHDs would be 16, at 2Tb each. And since this VSAN VM is to be used to home all your VMs on the host, you'd need it to have a fair bit of space. So having roughly a 32Tb limit could be a problem. Does this mean you'd need to have a second VSAN VM in that host, therefore upping that limit to 64Tb? And does the VSAN OS handle spanning the data across all 16 VHDs?

          Where are you getting your limits from? I literally just posted them and did the math on what you could provide as storage to a single VM.

          Xenserver has a limit of 16 VHDs per VM, I know this from experience and it is buried in their docs. I think the 255 you mention is for pure Xen, which I am not running.

          EDIT: Apparently the 16 VHD limit is a Xenserver 6.5 and earlier thing. Xenserver 7 is 255. I need to upgrade to 7....

          DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DustinB3403D
            DustinB3403
            last edited by

            Look at this link.

            http://docs.citrix.com/content/dam/docs/en-us/xenserver/current-release/downloads/xenserver-config-limits.pdf

            255 disks per VM, with a maximum of 4096 disks per host at the limits. Not 16.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DustinB3403D
              DustinB3403 @jrc
              last edited by

              @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

              EDIT: Apparently the 16 VHD limit is a Xenserver 6.5 and earlier thing. Xenserver 7 is 255. I need to upgrade to 7....

              Yeah you'd better. 😛

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • DustinB3403D
                DustinB3403
                last edited by

                Which means you can have an absolutely insane amount of storage space attached to the VSAN VM, and then pass that out to your other guests.

                @scottalanmiller do any single server units support up to 521,220 TB worth of raw space?

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @jrc
                  last edited by

                  @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

                  @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                  @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

                  Ok, let me take a step back here.

                  On the Host you install a VSAN controller VM, you then attach storage to this VM which it will then use as it's VSAN storage space and map that over to the host via iSCSI. Am I correct so far?

                  Allright, so with Xenserver, the max attached VHDs would be 16, at 2Tb each. And since this VSAN VM is to be used to home all your VMs on the host, you'd need it to have a fair bit of space. So having roughly a 32Tb limit could be a problem. Does this mean you'd need to have a second VSAN VM in that host, therefore upping that limit to 64Tb? And does the VSAN OS handle spanning the data across all 16 VHDs?

                  Where are you getting your limits from? I literally just posted them and did the math on what you could provide as storage to a single VM.

                  Xenserver has a limit of 16 VHDs per VM, I know this from experience and it is buried in their docs. I think the 255 you mention is for pure Xen, which I am not running.

                  EDIT: Apparently the 16 VHD limit is a Xenserver 6.5 and earlier thing. Xenserver 7 is 255. I need to upgrade to 7....

                  Ah good, so not perfect, but there is a solution. Made VDIs to one VM is just like small LUNs in the SAN world. Annoying, but fine.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @DustinB3403
                    last edited by

                    @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                    @scottalanmiller do any single server units support up to 521,220 TB worth of raw space?

                    With DAS units, maybe. Some things like large Oracle and IBM chassis can have a single server spanning dozens of racks. So... it's theoretically possible.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jrcJ
                      jrc @DustinB3403
                      last edited by

                      @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                      @dbeato You can completely skip Windows and use the Linux VSAN controllers.

                      https://www.starwindsoftware.com/announcing-new-linux-based-starwind-virtual-storage-appliance-video

                      Any idea on how I can download this? When I try all I can seem to find is the Windows installer.

                      DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DustinB3403D
                        DustinB3403 @jrc
                        last edited by

                        @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

                        @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                        @dbeato You can completely skip Windows and use the Linux VSAN controllers.

                        https://www.starwindsoftware.com/announcing-new-linux-based-starwind-virtual-storage-appliance-video

                        Any idea on how I can download this? When I try all I can seem to find is the Windows installer.

                        Use the request demo portion here.

                        Otherwise I'd hit up the folks @StarWind_Software to point you in the right direction.

                        jrcJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DustinB3403D
                          DustinB3403
                          last edited by

                          Additionally @Oksana might be able to point you into the right direction.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • jrcJ
                            jrc @DustinB3403
                            last edited by

                            @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                            @jrc said in Xenserver and Storage:

                            @dustinb3403 said in Xenserver and Storage:

                            @dbeato You can completely skip Windows and use the Linux VSAN controllers.

                            https://www.starwindsoftware.com/announcing-new-linux-based-starwind-virtual-storage-appliance-video

                            Any idea on how I can download this? When I try all I can seem to find is the Windows installer.

                            Use the request demo portion here.

                            Yeah, I did. It just send me the link to the Windows installer.

                            Otherwise I'd hit up the folks @StarWind_Software to point you in the right direction.

                            I'll give that a go.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Emad RE
                              Emad R @jrc
                              last edited by

                              @jrc

                              Hmm I see alot of Vsan advice which is the correct way to go, but I also wonder cant he do a simple thing like GlusterFS VM ? as well ? will that work in this case, and be simpler route ?

                              DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS olivierO 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • DustinB3403D
                                DustinB3403 @Emad R
                                last edited by

                                @emad-r said in Xenserver and Storage:

                                @jrc

                                Hmm I see alot of Vsan advice which is the correct way to go, but I also wonder cant he do a simple thing like GlusterFS VM ? as well ? will that work in this case, and be simpler route ?

                                Yes and No. Would it work, yes. Would it be easier to manage and maintain and setup, no. @olivier can speak more to GlusterFS.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @Emad R
                                  last edited by

                                  @emad-r said in Xenserver and Storage:

                                  @jrc

                                  Hmm I see alot of Vsan advice which is the correct way to go, but I also wonder cant he do a simple thing like GlusterFS VM ? as well ? will that work in this case, and be simpler route ?

                                  GlusterFS is still RLS, the advice is not really to use a VSAN, but to use RLS. People used to be sloppy and use VSA to refer to RLS, now they use VSAN. Neither is correct as RLS is more than any one connection technology.

                                  GlusterFS will work here, but it requires more nodes and is not practical at this scale. It would be slow and problematic. No advantages that I can think of.

                                  S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • olivierO
                                    olivier
                                    last edited by

                                    Gluster on 2 nodes won't be slow or problematic (which problems?) just a bit complicated without a turnkey deployment method (ie XOSAN).

                                    matteo nunziatiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • olivierO
                                      olivier @Emad R
                                      last edited by

                                      @emad-r said in Xenserver and Storage:

                                      @jrc

                                      Hmm I see alot of Vsan advice which is the correct way to go, but I also wonder cant he do a simple thing like GlusterFS VM ? as well ? will that work in this case, and be simpler route ?

                                      No simpler if not understood or with a turnkey "layer" on top.

                                      Gluster is not that complicated, but still, you need to grasp some concepts. It's like Xen vs XenServer in short. Second is turnkey and you don't need to get all stuff needed vs learning Xen "alone" on your distro.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • matteo nunziatiM
                                        matteo nunziati @olivier
                                        last edited by

                                        @olivier official gluster docs say a 2 node config will go readonly if 1 node dies... You need at least an arbiter node afaik

                                        olivierO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • olivierO
                                          olivier @matteo nunziati
                                          last edited by

                                          @matteo-nunziati This is why we have an extra arbiter VM in 2 nodes setup. I node got 2 VMs (1x normal and 1x arbiter), and the other one just a normal VM.

                                          This way, if you lose the host with one gluster VM, it will still work and you can't have a split-brain scenario.

                                          An arbiter node cost very few resources (it just works with metadata)

                                          matteo nunziatiM S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • matteo nunziatiM
                                            matteo nunziati @olivier
                                            last edited by

                                            @olivier said in Xenserver and Storage:

                                            @matteo-nunziati This is why we have an extra arbiter VM in 2 nodes setup. I node got 2 VMs (1x normal and 1x arbiter), and the other one just a normal VM.

                                            This way, if you lose the host with one gluster VM, it will still work and you can't have a split-brain scenario.

                                            An arbiter node cost very few resources (it just works with metadata)

                                            Wow blowing my mind! Always considered physical gluster nodes where gluater was installed on dom0. x-D.
                                            But what if the node w/ volume AND arbiter goes down? I'm still missing this... Is arbiter replicated in any way on the xen nodes?

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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