6.7

Table Of Contents
Selecting Virtual Machine Locations
When you are working on optimizing performance for your virtual machines, storage location is an
important factor. Depending on your storage needs, you might select storage with high performance and
high availability, or storage with lower performance.
Storage can be divided into different tiers depending on several factors:
n
High Tier. Offers high performance and high availability. Might offer built-in snapshots to facilitate
backups and point-in-time (PiT) restorations. Supports replication, full storage processor redundancy,
and SAS drives. Uses high-cost spindles.
n
Mid Tier. Offers mid-range performance, lower availability, some storage processor redundancy, and
SCSI or SAS drives. Might offer snapshots. Uses medium-cost spindles.
n
Lower Tier. Offers low performance, little internal storage redundancy. Uses low-end SCSI drives or
SATA.
Not all VMs must be on the highest-performance and most-available storage throughout their entire life
cycle.
When you decide where to place a virtual machine, the following considerations apply:
n
Criticality of the VM
n
Performance and availability requirements
n
PiT restoration requirements
n
Backup and replication requirements
A virtual machine might change tiers throughout its life cycle because of changes in criticality or changes
in technology. Criticality is relative and might change for various reasons, including changes in the
organization, operational processes, regulatory requirements, disaster planning, and so on.
Third-Party Management Applications
You can use third-party management applications with your ESXi host.
Most SAN hardware is packaged with storage management software. In many cases, this software is a
Web application that can be used with any Web browser connected to your network. In other cases, this
software typically runs on the storage system or on a single server, independent of the servers that use
the SAN for storage.
Use this third-party management software for the following tasks:
n
Storage array management, including LUN creation, array cache management, LUN mapping, and
LUN security.
n
Setting up replication, check points, snapshots, or mirroring.
vSphere Storage
VMware, Inc. 36