Aggiornamento - Virtual Machine Density Flexibility in WS08R2 Failover Clustering

Vi segnalo il Blog Post di Steven Ekren, Senior Program Manager Clustering & High-Availability, riguardo il recente cambio di policy riguardo il numero massimo di Virtual Machines (supportato) in un Host Cluster:

Virtual Machine Density Flexibility in Windows Server 2008 R2 Failover Clustering

Interessante la tabella presa ad esempio e le note relative:

Supporting 1000 VMs will enable increased flexibility to utilize hardware that has the capacity to host more VMs per physical server while maintaining the high availability and management components that Failover Clustering provides.  

Number of Nodes in Cluster

Max Number of VMs per Node

Average Number of VMs per active Node

Max # VMs in Cluster

2 Nodes (1 active + 1 failover)

384

384

384

3 Nodes (2 active + 1 failover)

384

384

768

4 Nodes (3 active + 1 failover)

384

333

1000

5 Nodes (4 active + 1 failover)

384

250

1000

6 Nodes (5 active + 1 failover)

384

200

1000

7 Nodes (6 active + 1 failover)

384

166

1000

8 Nodes (7 active + 1 failover)

384

142

1000

9 Nodes (8 active + 1 failover)

384

125

1000

10 Nodes (9 active + 1 failover)

384

111

1000

11 Nodes (10 active + 1 failover)

384

100

1000

12 Nodes (11 active + 1 failover)

384

90

1000

13 Nodes (12 active + 1 failover)

384

83

1000

14 Nodes (13 active + 1 failover)

384

76

1000

15 Nodes (14 active + 1 failover)

384

71

1000

16 Nodes (15 active + 1 failover)

384

66

1000

Note: There is no requirement to have a node without any VMs allocated as a “passive node”. All nodes can host VMs and have the equivalent to 1 node of capacity unallocated (total, across all the nodes) to allow for placement of VMs if a node fails or is taken out of active cluster membership for activities like patching or performing maintenance.  

Vi invito a leggere interamente il post, comprese le domande più frequenti.

 

Buone ferie, ammesso le abbiate Winking smile

 

Simone

Risorse correlate

Aggiornamento - Requirements and Limits for VMs and Hyper-V R2

Requirements and Limits for Virtual Machines and Hyper-V in Windows Server 2008 R2

Virtual Machine Density Flexibility in Windows Server 2008 R2 Failover Clustering