Veritas InfoScale™ 7.4.1 Virtualization Guide - Linux on ESXi
- Section I. Overview
- About Veritas InfoScale solutions in a VMware environment
- Section II. Deploying Veritas InfoScale products in a VMware environment
- Getting started
- Understanding Storage Configuration
- Section III. Use cases for Veritas InfoScale product components in a VMware environment
- Application availability using Cluster Server
- Multi-tier business service support
- Improving storage visibility, availability, and I/O performance using Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- How DMP works
- Improving data protection, storage optimization, data migration, and database performance
- Protecting data with InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Optimizing storage with InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Migrating data with InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Improving database performance with InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Setting up virtual machines for fast failover using Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability on VMware disks
- About setting up Storage Foundation Cluster File High System High Availability on VMware ESXi
- Configuring coordination point (CP) servers
- Section IV. Reference
About thin reclamation with InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
InfoScale product components support reclamation of the unused storage on thin-reclamation capable arrays and LUNs. InfoScale Solutions automatically discover LUNs that support thin reclamation.
If you configure InfoScale product components in Raw Device Mapping mode, InfoScale product components can control the storage in the VMware guests directly. With this configuration, you can use the thin reclamation functionality of InfoScale product components on the VMware guest. This configuration may limit some VMware functionality such as vMotion. You cannot use the thin reclamation functionality of InfoScale product components if the storage is configured in VMDK mode.InfoScale product components do not have the visibility to the physical storage under the VMware guest to reclaim the freed storage.
For more information about thin reclamation, see Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability Administrator's Guide or Storage Foundation Administrator's Guide.