6.5.1

Table Of Contents
Understanding Multipathing and
Failover 18
To maintain a constant connection between a host and its storage, ESXi supports multipathing. With
multipathing, you can use more than one physical path that transfers data between the host and an
external storage device.
If a failure of any element in the SAN network, such as an adapter, switch, or cable, occurs, ESXi can
switch to another viable physical path. This process of path switching to avoid failed components is
known as path failover.
In addition to path failover, multipathing provides load balancing. Load balancing is the process of
distributing I/O loads across multiple physical paths. Load balancing reduces or removes potential
bottlenecks.
Note Virtual machine I/O might be delayed for up to 60 seconds while path failover takes place. With
these delays, the SAN can stabilize its configuration after topology changes. In general, the I/O delays
might be longer on active-passive arrays and shorter on active-active arrays.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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Failovers with Fibre Channel
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Host-Based Failover with iSCSI
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Array-Based Failover with iSCSI
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Path Failover and Virtual Machines
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Managing Multiple Paths
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VMware Multipathing Module
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Path Scanning and Claiming
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Managing Storage Paths and Multipathing Plug-Ins
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Scheduling Queues for Virtual Machine I/Os
Failovers with Fibre Channel
To support multipathing, your host typically has two or more HBAs available. This configuration
supplements the SAN multipathing configuration. Generally, the SAN multipathing provides one or more
switches in the SAN fabric and one or more storage processors on the storage array device itself.
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