Monthly Archives: February 2012
[Resolved] VMware Workstation 8 – Windows XP VM Hang Issue
This video explains how I solved my own issue after I upgraded to VMware Workstation 8. It seems going throught he process of removing and adding virtual devices narrowed mine down the A: drive or aka Floppy Disk. I just simply disconnected it through VMware Workstation and I would recommend removing it entirely if you do not need it. To this you would need to power down the VM. Just for the record I did an upgrade for VMware workstation, however it completely uninstalls and reinstalls the new version.
1. Power Down the VM
2. Right Click and go to “Settings”
3. Click on the Floppy Drive
4. Click Remove
5. Click Ok
*NOTE* You can also just uncheck the connect at power on option as well. I hope this fixes your issue as well.
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – Installing VMware Workstation 8 Custom
This video simply depicts how to install VMware workstation 8. It’s nothing really advanced it just covers a more thoughtful way of install VMware workstation 8.
The only thing really important to note is that VMware Workstation 8 installs windows services as part of the installation. What this means is that if you do install it on a separate drive it will need to be a part of a back up in order to do a full system restore. Meaning that you will have to do an image of that other drive. When using windows 7 of course. Remember this is a simple approach and may not cover as deep as you may want it too.
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – First Series
Well, I have decided to dub my basic intro into VMware workstation labs as “Foundations” . I, like many others, enjoy discussing and learning about everything. Storage, networking, what I want to achieve, what I am designing for, name a few things you will have to consider in your lab. Sure, there is the easy stand up a lab slap some storage on it, run ESXi, Build vCenter, but for the few, the proud, and the pros… we like to cover it all. This series is pretty much going to go through every bit of that. Yeah, every bit… even the crumbs from the table. So here is the outline and obviously post videos and notes on each. Duly note, that at any time I may add a few dozen more post to foundations as I embark on this journey. I am looking forward to it and I hope you do as well! (Perhaps when I get to it I will do some CommVault vs. Veeam videos when I get a chance – OH, the drama!)
- The different kinds
- The Downloads and what you need to know
- VMware Workstation Storage Considerations
- Networking Considerations and Design
- Installing Custom VMware Workstation 8
- Creating you windows 2008 R2 template VM in VMware Workstation 7 and 8
Yeah, I know who would’ve ever thought a lab took this much thought. It’s just good stuff to think about and if people are board well you got something to do or watch. By the way, some videos have some music others don’t. Again feedback always appreciated!
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – VMware Workstation Storage Considerations
This video informs you of what you may or may not know about the different types of storage you can use for your VMware vSphere lab set up. Things like physical iSCSI and NFS and Virtual Storage Appliances (VSA) are important to know about and some are MIUCH cheaper than the other.
Links Show in the video:
http://www.techhead.co.uk/how-to-configure-openfiler-v23-iscsi-storage-for-use-with-vmware-esx
http://go.iomega.com/en-us/products/network-storage-desktop/storcenter-network-storage-solution/network-hard-drive-ix4-200d-cloud/?partner=4760
http://nickapedia.com/2010/05/01/celerra-vsa-uber-smaller-faster-easier-geekier/
http://thehyperadvisor.com/?p=934
http://www.vmware.com/products/datacenter-virtualization/vsphere/vsphere-storage-appliance/overview.html
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – The Template on Workstation 7 and 8 – Windows 2008 R2
This videos covers the template we will be setting up for deploying windows server 2008 r2 from. On this template we will be installing Active Directory, DNS, vCenter Server, and a lot more stuff. At the bottom of the blog will be references for ensuring your template is supremely prepped for space and performance!
Here are both the videos one for doing it:
VMware workstation 7:
On this video I made a few mistakes… but this wouldn’t be VirtualNoob if I didn’t make a few of those.
VMware workstation 8:
Really great resource:
http://www.happysysadm.com/2010/11/vmware-windows-2008-r2-template.html
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – Networking Considerations and Design
This how to will go into some detail of the Networking consideration for your VMware Lab. It’s all in what you want to do.
This video addresses those considerations and provides some details on how you may want to do that. If you want some resources for particular lab setup head on to the bottom.
Another Lovely Video
Networking (As seen in the video if you want to reproduce
- Management Stack for vCloud :
- Production stack for tenants:
- VMnet1 192.168.240.xxx – ESXi Management Host-Only (isolated for security )
- VMNET2 192.168.238.xxx – iSCSI (vmkernal port group and NFS will be shared)
- VMNET3 192.168.237.xxx – vMotion
- VMNET4 192.168.5.xxx – VM Networks for ESXi host
-
VMnet8 192.168.4.xxx – Production-MGMT
.10 = Domain Controllers
.20 = vCenter Servers (2 interfaces one for ESXi MGMT and Production)
.30 = All Other systems
- VMNET5 192.168.120.xxx – vCloud Mgmt
Other Wonderful Links on vSphere Labs and Networking Design included are SRM and vCloud Director Setups:
http://nickapedia.com/2010/10/07/lights-camera-replication-uber-srm-video-guide/
http://www.hypervizor.com/2010/09/video-guide-taking-vmware-vcloud-director-for-a-spin-and-on-the-go/
http://www.yellow-bricks.com/2010/09/13/creating-a-vcd-lab-on-your-maclaptop/
http://blog.tsugliani.fr/featured/create-your-own-virtual-vcloud-lab-part-1/
http://www.chriscolotti.us/vmware/vsphere/vmware-vcloud-in-a-box-for-your-home-lab/
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere Labs – Foundations – Downloads and knowing what you need
This video just covers the basics of what you need to download to get your vSphere Lab up and going. For more this video isn’t useful but it does address understanding Trials, how to access to products, and etc. This is covering a VMware Workstation 8 Lab set up.
Basically here is an overview of what the video covers:
- 60 Day Trials
- The Value of Partnerships
- Understanding the foundation and products for building your lab
- What to consider from a product stand point
- #VMTNSubscription Movement
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware vSphere 4 and 5 Labs – Foundations – The different kinds…
To Build a lab:
I have been thinking a lot about how there seems to be a few gaps in the VMware community when it comes to learning to set up a VMware vSphere lab environment. So I thought I would take the time to try and put together a full on post dedicated to resources on building a VMware Lab. When I first thought about this I wasn’t sure if I wanted to do a full A-Z build. Covering every single feature or deployment, but often times I would rather not re-invent the wheel. There are MANY post covering how to do this in general but I wanted to make a point of identifying the types of labs that you can set up and how to exactly go about it as well. The key word is “lab” so you don’t want to spend a ton of money (unless you have it) on your lab. To start off there are a multitude of setups you can do and many ways you can do it. I also want to stress that if you are getting ready for your test then YOU need to have one of these labs.
vSphere Lab video 2 Cents and quick overview! (this is my fist video post)
Nested VMware vSphere Lab
- Hosted on a Desktop Virtualization Product Like VMware Workstation 7 or 8
- Allows for easy HCL compliance
- Does require a robust desktop
- Can get slow depending on what you’re doing (design)
- Networking is all virtualized (plus)
- Storage can be virtualized or something like iSCSI can be used
- Mobility (can move VM’s around between desktops and laptops)
Physical VMware vSphere Lab
- Runs ESXi as bare metal
- Is more expensive
- “Real World” set up so is truly a lab
- Must meet HCL
- Will need Physical Networking (Managed networking highly recommended)
- Takes longer to build out or rebuild
- Can run nested labs on top of ESXi (pretty much using ESXi in the way you would use VMware Workstation)
- Storage can be virtualized or something like iSCSI can be used
- Can move hosted VM’s but the physical systems are not portable/mobile (depends I guess)
In a nutshell I will be covering the nested set-up since that seems to be the less expensive rig. I also love the fact that I can move it around to my laptop and desktop which is quite handy. Also fairly easy to backup as well.
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
VMware Certified Professional on vSphere 5! – My Experience
On January 31, 2012 I officially passed my vSphere 5 exam and I am now a VCP 5. The test was very interesting indeed. You hear all sorts of rumors and things of that nature before you take it. I have made a post previously HERE. This pretty much covers everything you need to know. I don’t think I can discuss testing material but what I can tell you is learn a lot about the components of vSphere 5 clustering. Also learn about the Pros and the Cons centered around all the vSphere 5 features.
The test in of itself was actually harder than the vSphere 4 test I took over a year ago. I was also a lot more prepared and had some pressure on me to get it done because I wouldn’t have to pay for training. I would encourage that if any of you are familiar with vSphere 5, Been running it in a lab, and constantly learning new features, know vSphere 4.1 well, then I would go ahead and go take the test. Reason being is that you can end up spending more money waiting to take it later when you can possibly pass it now. Most companies are also going to be more willing to reimburse the expense of an exam then to actually spend money on an course.
Notice my comment on 4.1. Previous VCP were based off of 4.0 only. If you are really familiar with 4.1 then you already have a good lead into the knowledge base of 5.0. If you are a VMware partner then head to the partner portal and take some other course ware related to “What’s New” in vSphere 5. I did pretty good considering the amount of time and the pressure. I would definitely vote on subscribing to the latest VMware Certified Professional on vSphere 5 brown bags over at Cody Bunch’s site.
Either way, now that I have my VCP 5 out of the way I can hopefully attempt to get some advanced certifications around vSphere 4 taken care of.
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.org and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~
CommVault Simpana 9 Vs. VEEAM 6 Round 2 “DING!!” – Features – VMware Backup
CommVault Notes are currently ommitted for the time being:
The Bad:
VEEAM:
- vCloud Integration is supported but “lacking” for a better term (requires some manual work)
- Apparently doesn’t have the best dedupe (Is still debated I believe)
- CPU based (Socket) licensing (You know what your getting upfront. No additional cost when compared to A la Carte or Capacity)
- No Physical backup (yeah, yeah, we all know that)
- NFS best performance is a Linux installed OS with NFS mounted for a target
- Not a TON of features or granularity as it seemed to me when compared to commvault. CommVault just has a ton of bells and whistles. (Can be pro or con)
The Good:
Similarities: (Yes you can correct me here if you like)
- Both can scale out (CommVault uses Media Agents and Veeam uses Backups servers and repositories
- Offer Central Management Solutions
- Both do SAN based backups (LAN-Free, snap protect, whatever you want to call it)
- Load Balanced Based Backups (Media agent in CommVault can do this and Veeam does it with Backup Proxies)
- Both have certifications on various storage arrays for the SAN-Based backup
- Both have VCD support but not completely automated restores (I do see this hopefully changing)
VEEAM
- Very Simple Basic approach. In some ways this can be good or bad but the fact it has a simple approach was nice this makes it easier for people to learn and use.
- Restores super easy (single click)
- Can install easily as a single instance (all in one backup server) or scale out for enterprise wide deployments (NOTE:easy)
- Backs up Object Level without an agent (This is a nice plus no agents = no special networking)
- Can Dedupe to a NFS (Dedupe) Media Target (not sure how but they say they can do it, please correct me if I am wrong)
- Licensing is CPU sockets based so you can now what you are licensed for. (Can be more than an ala carte version of CV. However I would think would be cheaper in most instances)
- Can verify and test backups in a sand box environment (i.e. send an email from an exchange server)
- For whatever reason we had no snapshots left by Veeam ever… really nice.
***Disclaimer: The thoughts and views expressed on VirtualNoob.wordpress.com and Chad King in no way reflect the views or thoughts of his employer or any other views of a company. These are his personal opinions which are formed on his own. Also, products improve over time and some things maybe out of date. Please feel free to contact us and request an update and we will be happy to assist. Thanks!~