Veritas InfoScale™ 8.0 Virtualization Guide - AIX
- Section I. Overview
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions in AIX PowerVM virtual environments
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions in AIX PowerVM virtual environments
- Section II. Implementation
- Setting up Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions in AIX PowerVM virtual environments
- Supported configurations for Virtual I/O servers (VIOS) on AIX
- Installing and configuring Storage Foundation and High Availability (SFHA) Solutions in the logical partition (LPAR)
- Installing and configuring Cluster Server for logical partition and application availability
- Supported configurations for Virtual I/O servers (VIOS) on AIX
- Setting up Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions in AIX PowerVM virtual environments
- Section III. Use cases for AIX PowerVM virtual environments
- Application to spindle visibility
- Simplified storage management in VIOS
- Configuring Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) on Virtual I/O server
- Configuring Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) pseudo devices as virtual SCSI devices
- Extended attributes in VIO client for a virtual SCSI disk
- Virtual machine (logical partition) availability
- Simplified management and high availability for IBM Workload Partitions
- Implementing Storage Foundation support for WPARs
- How Cluster Server (VCS) works with Workload Patitions (WPARs)
- Configuring VCS in WPARs
- High availability and live migration
- Limitations and unsupported LPAR features
- Multi-tier business service support
- Server consolidation
- About IBM Virtual Ethernet
- Using Storage Foundation in the logical partition (LPAR) with virtual SCSI devices
- How DMP handles I/O for vSCSI devices
- Physical to virtual migration (P2V)
- Section IV. Reference
Recommendations for improved resiliency of InfoScale clusters in virtualized environments
Veritas recommends that you configure the following settings to improve the resiliency of InfoScale cluster configurations in virtualized environments:
Peerinact: Set the default LLT tunable parameter peerinact to 32 seconds instead of 16 seconds. Doing so helps improve the stability of the cluster in virtualized environments, where multiple external factors as described further in this list, can affect the stability of the cluster.
Provisioning ratio: The CPU and memory provisioning ratio affects the stability of the InfoScale cluster. To ensure maximum stability, set the ratio to the lowest value possible. For critical solutions that require maximum resiliency, the ratio must be set to 1:1.
CPU load on host operating systems: Although the provisioning ratio is low, the CPU load on the host operating systems still plays a part in cluster stability. If the load on the host operating system is very high, it can affect how vCPUs on the guest VMs are scheduled, because vCPUs are processes from the perspective of the host servers.
CPU requirement of the actual workload on guests: When the total CPU requirement for workloads exceeds the available physical CPU capacity, it causes node evictions due to heartbeat timeouts.
External events: External events like live migration of the guest VMs, virtualized disk backups, and so on, are known to add CPU load on the host servers. To reduce this additional load on the CPU, watch the stun duration in your environment caused by these events, and increase the peerinact value, if required. Increase the peerinact value only in these conditions and not in any other circumstances.
Hypervisor: Always follow the best practices for the hypervisor.