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Table Of Contents
8 In the New Virtual Machine - Edit Settings dialog box, expand SCSI controller and select the
Change Type drop-down menu.
9 Select the appropriate type of controller, depending on your operating system.
Operating System Type of Controller
Windows Server 2003 SP1 and SP2 LSI Logic Parallel
Windows Server 2008 SP2 and above LSI Logic SAS
Windows Server 2008 SP2 and above VMware Paravirtual
For supported guest operating systems see Table 62.
10 Click OK.
11 In the New Virtual Machine - Edit Settings dialog box, expand SCSI controller and select the SCSI
Bus Sharing drop-down menu. Set SCSI Bus Sharing to Physical and click OK.
The virtual machine is connected to a public network and a private network with two virtual switches, and
is connected to the quorum disk on FC SAN and the virtual machine virtual disk on local or remote
storage.
Add Hard Disks to Additional Nodes for Clusters Across
Physical Hosts
To allow shared access to clustered services and data, point the quorum disk of the second node to the
same location as the first node’s quorum disk. Point shared storage disks to the same location as the first
node’s shared storage disks.
Prerequisites
Before you begin, obtain the following information:
n
Which virtual device node is for the first virtual machine's shared storage disks (for example, SCSI
(1:0)).
n
The location of the quorum disk specified for the first node.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select the newly created virtual machine, right-click and select Edit Settings.
2 Click the New device drop-down menu, select Existing Hard Disk, and click Add.
3 In Disk File Path, browse to the location of the quorum disk specified for the first node.
4 Select Physical as the compatibility mode and click Next.
5 Select the same virtual device node you chose for the first virtual machine’s shared storage disks (for
example, SCSI (1:0)), and click OK.
Note The location of the virtual device node for this virtual machine’s shared storage must match the
corresponding virtual device node for the first virtual machine.
Setup for Failover Clustering and Microsoft Cluster Service
VMware, Inc. 26