6.0.1

Table Of Contents
Virtual Volumes and Storage Protocols
The Virtual Volumes functionality supports Fibre Channel, FCoE, iSCSI, and NFS. Storage transports expose
protocol endpoints to ESXi hosts.
When the SCSI-based protocol is used, the protocol endpoint represents a LUN dened by a T10-based LUN
WWN. For the NFS protocol, the protocol endpoint is a mount point, such as IP address or DNS name and a
share name.
No maer what storage protocol is used, a virtual volume, like a les on other traditional datastores, is
presented to a virtual machine as a SCSI disk. Virtual Volumes on disk arrays supports the same set of SCSI
commands as VMFS and uses ATS as a locking mechanism.
Virtual Volumes on NAS devices supports the same NFS Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs) that are required
by ESXi hosts to connect to NFS mount points.
These considerations and guidelines apply when you use dierent storage protocols:
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With NFS, you can use version 3. Virtual Volumes does not support NFS 4.1.
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IPv6 format is not supported.
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For iSCSI, you must activate the software iSCSI adapter. Congure Dynamic Discovery and enter the IP
address of the Virtual Volumes Storage Provider. See “Congure the Software iSCSI Adapter,” on
page 81.
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You can congure multipathing on a SCSI-based protocol endpoint, but not on an NFS-based protocol
endpoint. No maer which protocol you use, a storage array can provide multiple protocol endpoints
for availability purposes.
vSphere Storage
218 VMware, Inc.