Saturday, September 22, 2018

Goodbye vSphere 5.5




End of General Support(EoGS) for one of the greatest version of VMware vSphere has come. So VMware announced that does not support vSphere 5.5 (in full level) anymore and recommended upgrading to vSphere 6.5 / 6.7 . But still there is technically support available until 19 SEP 2020 through the self-help portal. In this duration there is no more new HCL offering, no hotfixes, no security updates and patches.
Here is list of other VMware products and their Lifecycles.

Sunday, September 16, 2018

VMware SDDC Design Considerations - PART Three: SDDC Availability




  In the third part of SDDC Design (based on VMware Validated Design Reference Architecture Guide), we will review one of the major steps on SDDC Design about physical design and availability. Before any steps on data-center physical design, we should consider an important classification based on the availability aspect: Regions & Zones. Multiple Availability Zones form a Region, but what is the A-Zone?
  Unfortunately, many disastrous events like earthquakes, massive floods, and large power fluctuations may cause interruption of IT communication as the service failures or unavailability of network components. So you need to segregate the DC total infrastructure into the regions & zones. A zone of SDDC, now mentioned as A-Zone is an independent area of infrastructure that is isolated as a physical distinct. A-Zones will improve SLA and redundancy factors and must be highly reliable because controlling network infrastructure failure boundaries is the main reason for their presence. Interruptions may have internal causes, such as power outage, cooling problems and generators failure so each one of the zones should have their own safety teams (HSE and Fire departments).
  There are two main factors to distinguish the differences of A-Zone & Region: distance of two sites (Primary/Recovery) and network bandwidth of fiber connections between them. Basically, A-Zones have metro distances (less than 50km/30mile) that usually connected with dark fiber to each other and there must be low latency as a single-digit and high network bandwidth. So they can act as Active-Active or Active-Passive sites for each other. For more than that mentioned distance range, it’s highly recommended to put each A-Zone to different Regions but related workloads must be spread across multiple A-Zones belongs to the same Region.
 
  SDDC Business Continuity can be improved by operating many technologies and replication techniques such as:
  1. VMware vSphere FT for the VM-level Replication.
  2. VMware vSphere HA to provide VM availability at Host and Cluster-level.
  3. VMware vSphere DRS to act as a VM distributer to prevent load/VM aggregation on the Host of a cluster.
  4. VMware vSAN as the Software-Defined Storage solution for better availability on environments without a physical storage system.
  5. VMware Replication as an integrated appliance-based replication solution for inside or outside of the site or zone.
  6. Storage-vendor Replication solutions as the third-party solutions replication such as DELL EMC RecoverPoint, NetApp SnapMirror, and HPE 3PAR.
  7. Software Replication solutions such as Zerto Virtual Replication and Veeam Backup & Replication.
  8. VMware SRM as one of the best options for site replication & recovery solution.

I will start a new journey soon ...