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    Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions

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    • travisdh1T
      travisdh1
      last edited by

      I'd recommend watching @scottalanmiller's MangoCon Talk on architectures.

      I never would have considered a SAN in the first place at two hosts.. so yeah. 3 hosts and VSAN.

      Mike DavisM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Mike DavisM
        Mike Davis @travisdh1
        last edited by

        I haven't found a case where the cost of vSAN made sense with so many other options out there. I think with 3 hosts and 2 CPUs each he would be in the neighborhood of $14,000 for the vSAN licenses. Has anyone found a good use case for vSAN?

        travisdh1T scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • travisdh1T
          travisdh1 @Mike Davis
          last edited by

          @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

          I haven't found a case where the cost of vSAN made sense with so many other options out there. I think with 3 hosts and 2 CPUs each he would be in the neighborhood of $14,000 for the vSAN licenses. Has anyone found a good use case for vSAN?

          Really? Geesh, nevermind, XS7 + gluster.

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @Mike Davis
            last edited by

            @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

            I haven't found a case where the cost of vSAN made sense with so many other options out there. I think with 3 hosts and 2 CPUs each he would be in the neighborhood of $14,000 for the vSAN licenses. Has anyone found a good use case for vSAN?

            Well, since you get get HA from a SAN at that price, if you want a VMware product that price is great. I'm not sure what you are saying. Have you tried pricing the alternative? I've not found a case where VSAN hasn't been the clear winner.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @travisdh1
              last edited by

              @travisdh1 said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

              @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

              I haven't found a case where the cost of vSAN made sense with so many other options out there. I think with 3 hosts and 2 CPUs each he would be in the neighborhood of $14,000 for the vSAN licenses. Has anyone found a good use case for vSAN?

              Really? Geesh, nevermind, XS7 + gluster.

              If you are a shop choosing the VMware support cost already, that's nothing. You have to keep it in perspective. If you are running VMware here it means that at a minimum you have already committed to Essentials Plus which really gives you nothing (other than support, that's what you are paying for) that XS or Hyper-V don't do for free. If you blink at $14K for VSAN, something is very wrong elsewhere. And compared to a SAN equivalent, it is about half the price.

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

                @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                I haven't found a case where the cost of vSAN made sense with so many other options out there. I think with 3 hosts and 2 CPUs each he would be in the neighborhood of $14,000 for the vSAN licenses. Has anyone found a good use case for vSAN?

                Compare to the SAN alternative:

                https://mangolassi.it/topic/11937/cost-study-3-node-scale-vs-3-node-vmware-ipod/
                https://mangolassi.it/topic/11936/cost-study-3-node-scale-vs-3-node-vmware-vsan/

                VSAN beats the IPOD SAN by $30,000 while providing a better solution.

                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @NetworkNerd
                  last edited by

                  @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                  Any advice is much appreciated.

                  You only need two nodes, no need to change that. Tell Dell to take back the gear that they wrongfully sold to you and to provide you with the disks that you need for local storage and give back the difference in a check . Then get Starwind VSAN which only requires two nodes. You have no need for the third node, nor the SAN, nor the VMware VSAN cost. All of that is just "extra."

                  NetworkNerdN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • NetworkNerdN
                    NetworkNerd @Mike Davis
                    last edited by

                    @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                    The questions I have is what is your backup target and will AppAssure work with 3 local hosts and your target? You mentioned needing cache to hit your IOP target. Will the 3 hosts and direct attached make it? Years ago at the last VMUG conference I went to there were a ton of vendors that had caching cards for servers to help out with direct attached loads. With the money you get back from the SAN, that could be a wash.

                    The backup target will be the AppAssure appliance. It has internal storage of somewhere around 18 TB I believe. This will be replicated to another appliance in a datacenter offsite.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • NetworkNerdN
                      NetworkNerd @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                      @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                      Any advice is much appreciated.

                      You only need two nodes, no need to change that. Tell Dell to take back the gear that they wrongfully sold to you and to provide you with the disks that you need for local storage and give back the difference in a check . Then get Starwind VSAN which only requires two nodes. You have no need for the third node, nor the SAN, nor the VMware VSAN cost. All of that is just "extra."

                      That's certainly an option.  If I'm reading this correctly, Starwind has an option to run in-kernel on VMware - https://www.starwindsoftware.com/whitepapers/free-vs-paid.pdf.  It looks like this would also allow caching to SSDs or to RAM within the host.  So I guess you just choose the drives you want to be part of your storage and those you want to be used for caching and go from there?  And since we'd be looking at the iSCSI HA, is your total usable storage only the storage that is in one of the servers?

                      scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @NetworkNerd
                        last edited by

                        @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                        @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                        Any advice is much appreciated.

                        You only need two nodes, no need to change that. Tell Dell to take back the gear that they wrongfully sold to you and to provide you with the disks that you need for local storage and give back the difference in a check . Then get Starwind VSAN which only requires two nodes. You have no need for the third node, nor the SAN, nor the VMware VSAN cost. All of that is just "extra."

                        That's certainly an option.  If I'm reading this correctly, Starwind has an option to run in-kernel on VMware - https://www.starwindsoftware.com/whitepapers/free-vs-paid.pdf.  It looks like this would also allow caching to SSDs or to RAM within the host.  So I guess you just choose the drives you want to be part of your storage and those you want to be used for caching and go from there?  And since we'd be looking at the iSCSI HA, is your total usable storage only the storage that is in one of the servers?

                        Paging @kooler on that one.

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

                          @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                          And since we'd be looking at the iSCSI HA, is your total usable storage only the storage that is in one of the servers?

                          That is necessary for HA to be possible. Whether this is a SAN, VMware VSAN, Starwind VSAN, NAS.... if you don't replicate it, it's not really HA. So yes, the data has to be on both hosts as there are only two, they have to be mirrored.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Mike DavisM
                            Mike Davis
                            last edited by

                            With only 2 hosts that have 6 bays for drives, he's going to need direct attached storage. What does Dell offer for this?

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

                              What storage is needed? This is the problem with buying 1U servers, the decision to be dependent on external storage was used to make sure that these don't meet the need either. Mike is right, tell Dell to take it ALL back and replace them with R730 instead. That will solve the issue.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • NetworkNerdN
                                NetworkNerd @Mike Davis
                                last edited by

                                @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                With only 2 hosts that have 6 bays for drives, he's going to need direct attached storage. What does Dell offer for this?

                                Sorry - the hosts have 8 bays for drives, but we would fill 1-2 for each host with SSDs for caching (ideally).

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

                                  @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                  @Mike-Davis said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                  With only 2 hosts that have 6 bays for drives, he's going to need direct attached storage. What does Dell offer for this?

                                  Sorry - the hosts have 8 bays for drives, but we would fill 1-2 for each host with SSDs for caching (ideally).

                                  Would 2 + 6 be enough for your workload? Doesn't seem likely.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • NetworkNerdN
                                    NetworkNerd
                                    last edited by

                                    I know there's pressure from above to get something in place quickly because the gear has been sitting for a bit since it was ordered (short on man power before I came here in December). I believe Dell wants to replace hardware with hardware (EMC Unity, Compellent, etc.) so they can stick it to us on maintenance costs of the SAN over time and then try to sell us another one someday. With them taking the PowerVault back and us going with some some type of VSAN solution (Starwind or other), I don't think their margins are as high over time.

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

                                      @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                      I know there's pressure from above to get something in place quickly because the gear has been sitting for a bit since it was ordered (short on man power before I came here in December). I believe Dell wants to replace hardware with hardware (EMC Unity, Compellent, etc.) so they can stick it to us on maintenance costs of the SAN over time and then try to sell us another one someday. With them taking the PowerVault back and us going with some some type of VSAN solution (Starwind or other), I don't think their margins are as high over time.

                                      Yeah, not even close. You could always just cancel the whole deal and move to another vendor, too. If Dell gives you any pressure, send it all back. The sale was in bad faith, you shouldn't be responsible for "fixing it."

                                      They should be happy that you are willing to work with them at all at this point. They should be bending over backwards to not lose a customer.

                                      NetworkNerdN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                      • NetworkNerdN
                                        NetworkNerd @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                        @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                        I know there's pressure from above to get something in place quickly because the gear has been sitting for a bit since it was ordered (short on man power before I came here in December). I believe Dell wants to replace hardware with hardware (EMC Unity, Compellent, etc.) so they can stick it to us on maintenance costs of the SAN over time and then try to sell us another one someday. With them taking the PowerVault back and us going with some some type of VSAN solution (Starwind or other), I don't think their margins are as high over time.

                                        Yeah, not even close. You could always just cancel the whole deal and move to another vendor, too. If Dell gives you any pressure, send it all back. The sale was in bad faith, you shouldn't be responsible for "fixing it."

                                        They should be happy that you are willing to work with them at all at this point. They should be bending over backwards to not lose a customer.

                                        They have not pressured us at all (quite the other way around, actually). From what I have heard the account team say (even after not having been on all the calls), they seem to truly want to do what it takes to make things right and retain a happy customer at the end of the day. But I did mention to the boss that I found it extremely interesting they never offered a VSAN type solution even as an option when looking at "alternatives."

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

                                          @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                          @NetworkNerd said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                          I know there's pressure from above to get something in place quickly because the gear has been sitting for a bit since it was ordered (short on man power before I came here in December). I believe Dell wants to replace hardware with hardware (EMC Unity, Compellent, etc.) so they can stick it to us on maintenance costs of the SAN over time and then try to sell us another one someday. With them taking the PowerVault back and us going with some some type of VSAN solution (Starwind or other), I don't think their margins are as high over time.

                                          Yeah, not even close. You could always just cancel the whole deal and move to another vendor, too. If Dell gives you any pressure, send it all back. The sale was in bad faith, you shouldn't be responsible for "fixing it."

                                          They should be happy that you are willing to work with them at all at this point. They should be bending over backwards to not lose a customer.

                                          They have not pressured us at all (quite the other way around, actually). From what I have heard the account team say (even after not having been on all the calls), they seem to truly want to do what it takes to make things right and retain a happy customer at the end of the day. But I did mention to the boss that I found it extremely interesting they never offered a VSAN type solution even as an option when looking at "alternatives."

                                          Well, likely they don't offer it because they don't make it. Even fixing a sale you don't expect someone to switch to a competitors product. Now, technically, VMware VSAN is part of Dell so it is their solution to sell. But they are a separate operating company and the Dell team probably doesn't see it as a single entity.

                                          NetworkNerdN S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • NetworkNerdN
                                            NetworkNerd @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Vendor Mistake - VMware Infrastructure Decisions:

                                            Well, likely they don't offer it because they don't make it. Even fixing a sale you don't expect someone to switch to a competitors product. Now, technically, VMware VSAN is part of Dell so it is their solution to sell. But they are a separate operating company and the Dell team probably doesn't see it as a single entity.

                                            They were the ones who suggested Infinio, and I don't even think they sell it. But I see what you mean.

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