6.7

Table Of Contents
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Add a Virtual Machine to a Resource Pool
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Remove a Virtual Machine from a Resource Pool
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Remove a Resource Pool
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Resource Pool Admission Control
Why Use Resource Pools?
Resource pools allow you to delegate control over resources of a host (or a cluster), but the benefits are
evident when you use resource pools to compartmentalize all resources in a cluster. Create multiple
resource pools as direct children of the host or cluster and configure them. You can then delegate control
over the resource pools to other individuals or organizations.
Using resource pools can result in the following benefits.
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Flexible hierarchical organization—Add, remove, or reorganize resource pools or change resource
allocations as needed.
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Isolation between pools, sharing within pools—Top-level administrators can make a pool of resources
available to a department-level administrator. Allocation changes that are internal to one departmental
resource pool do not unfairly affect other unrelated resource pools.
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Access control and delegation—When a top-level administrator makes a resource pool available to a
department-level administrator, that administrator can then perform all virtual machine creation and
management within the boundaries of the resources to which the resource pool is entitled by the
current shares, reservation, and limit settings. Delegation is usually done in conjunction with
permissions settings.
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Separation of resources from hardware—If you are using clusters enabled for DRS, the resources of
all hosts are always assigned to the cluster. That means administrators can perform resource
management independently of the actual hosts that contribute to the resources. If you replace three
2GB hosts with two 3GB hosts, you do not need to make changes to your resource allocations.
This separation allows administrators to think more about aggregate computing capacity and less
about individual hosts.
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Management of sets of virtual machines running a multitier service— Group virtual machines for a
multitier service in a resource pool. You do not need to set resources on each virtual machine.
Instead, you can control the aggregate allocation of resources to the set of virtual machines by
changing settings on their enclosing resource pool.
For example, assume a host has a number of virtual machines. The marketing department uses three of
the virtual machines and the QA department uses two virtual machines. Because the QA department
needs larger amounts of CPU and memory, the administrator creates one resource pool for each group.
The administrator sets CPU Shares to High for the QA department pool and to Normal for the Marketing
department pool so that the QA department users can run automated tests. The second resource pool
with fewer CPU and memory resources is sufficient for the lighter load of the marketing staff. Whenever
the QA department is not fully using its allocation, the marketing department can use the available
resources.
vSphere Resource Management
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