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S007 040b Heads Up Vsa Quad Port Nic Support
S007 040b Heads Up Vsa Quad Port Nic Support
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The reasons for not using a quad port NIC on the VSA should be obvious. This is the response I gave on the
forum:
There are two network s for the VSA, the front end for VSA management and NFS presentation and a
back end for cluster communication and replication. Because we didnt want a single NIC failure to
bring down the whole of the node, the requirement is to team each of the front end and back -end
network s. It was a design choice.
This is why the installer wont let you proceed with a single quad port NIC a NIC failure in this case
(even with teaming) will bring down the whole node. So ideally, one would have two dual port NIC (or
four single port NICs if you wish).
That way the VSA node can continue to function and present shared storage to your virtual
infrastructure, even if a single NIC fails.
The same design choice was used when requiring a RAID level for disk s on each host we didnt want
a single spindle failure bringing down a complete node.
However, from a support perspective, it has been decided that VMware will support the use of quad port
NICs with the VSA. There is a workaround that you can use for VSA 5.1 (or 5.1.1) which leverages some of
the new brownfield deployment functionality. It basically requires you to preconfigure the network of each of
the ESXi hosts in advance of installing the VSA, setting up the front-end and back-end networks manually.
cormachogan.com/2012/12/04/heads-up-vsa-quad-port-nic-support/
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This means that the quad port NIC check is bypassed and the install will proceed. There is some work
involved, so make sure that you setup correctly.
Step 1 Two vSwitches must exist vSwitch0 & vSwitch1. In all likelihood, vSwitch0 will already exists, so
only vSwitch1 must be created.
Step 2 vSwitch0 must contain 2 uplinks, e.g. vmnic0 & vmnic2 (both must be active, and teaming must be
set to originating port id)
Step 3 vSwitch1 must contain the other 2 uplinks, e.g. vmnic1 & vmnic3 (both must be active, and
teaming must also be set to originating port id)
Step 4 -vSwitch0 should already contain a VM network (virtual machine) and a vmkernel network
(management). Each of these needs to be modified so that vmnic2 is the active uplink and vmnic0 is the
standby uplink.
Step 5 Also on vSwitch0, a new virtual machine portgroup must be created. It should be called VSA-Front
End (it must have that exact spelling). It should be configured so that vmnic0 is the active uplink and vmnic2
is the standby uplink (the reverse configuration of the virtual machine and management ports). If using
VLANs, a VLAN id needs to be associated. That completes the setup on vSwitch0.
Step 6 Now we move to vSwitch1. Create a new virtual machine portgroup called VSA-Back End (exact
spelling). It should be configured so that vmnic1 is the active uplink and vmnic3 is the standby uplink. If
using VLANs, a VLAN id should be associated.
Step 7 Create a vmkernel port on vSwitch1 called VSA-VMotion (exact spelling). It should be configured
so that vmnic3 is the active uplink and vmnic1 is the standby uplink (the reverse configuration of the VSABack End portgroup). If using VLANs, this portgroup must share the same VLAN as the VSA-Front End
network. That completes the setup of vSwitch1.
The completed network configuration should look something like that.
cormachogan.com/2012/12/04/heads-up-vsa-quad-port-nic-support/
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Ignore the fact that there is a VM called WinXP in this setup. You may or may not have VMs depending on
whether you are doing a greenfield (vanilla) install or a brownfield install. You can now proceed with the VSA
5.1 installation using a quad port NIC.
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This entry was posted in appliance, Storage, vSphere Storage Appliance and tagged heads-up, VSA
by Cormac. Bookmark the permalink [http://cormachogan.com/2012/12/04/heads-up-vsa-quad-portnic-support/] .
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Pingback: VMTN Blog: Technical Marketing Update 2012 Week 48 #tmupdate | Virtualization
Thet
on February 7, 2013 at 7:28 am said:
Thank you. This solved the problem. Appreciated your step by step and detail.
Andrej Kanajev
on March 3, 2013 at 2:39 pm said:
cleristononline
on June 13, 2013 at 6:47 pm said:
Leandro
on September 13, 2013 at 10:45 pm said:
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Is there any possibility to configure what I need without add a new NIC card to the VM Network?
I believe Im stuck on a networking issue and my knowledge can sort out this issue.
cormachogan.com/2012/12/04/heads-up-vsa-quad-port-nic-support/
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