Managing power resources, Managing power resources 62 – VMware vSphere vCenter Server 4.0 User Manual

Page 62

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A cluster can also turn red if you reconfigure a resource pool while a virtual machine is failing over. A virtual

machine that is failing over is disconnected and does not count toward the reservation used by the parent

resource pool. You might reduce the reservation of the parent resource pool before the failover completes.

After the failover is complete, the virtual machine resources are again charged to the parent resource pool. If

the pool’s usage becomes larger than the new reservation, the cluster turns red.
As is shown in the example in

Figure 6-4

, if a user is able to start a virtual machine (in an unsupported way)

with a reservation of 3GHz under resource pool 2, the cluster would become red.

Figure 6-4. Red Cluster

cluster

Total Capacity: 12G

Reserved Capacity: 12G 15G

Available Capacity: 0G

RP1 (expandable)

Reservation: 4G

Reservation Used: 4G

Unreserved: 0G

RP2

Reservation: 2G

Reservation Used: 2G 5G

Unreserved: 0G

RP3 (expandable)

Reservation: 6G

Reservation Used: 2G

Unreserved: 4G 0G

VM1, 1G

VM7, 3G

VM2, 3G

VM3, 1G

VM4, 1G

VM5, 1G

VM6, 1G

Managing Power Resources

The VMware Distributed Power Management (DPM) feature allows a DRS cluster to reduce its power

consumption by powering hosts on and off based on cluster resource utilization.
VMware DPM monitors the cumulative demand of all virtual machines in the cluster for memory and CPU

resources and compares this to the total available resource capacity of all hosts in the cluster. If sufficient excess

capacity is found, VMware DPM places one or more hosts in standby mode and powers them off after migrating

their virtual machines to other hosts. Conversely, when capacity is deemed to be inadequate, DRS brings hosts

out of standby mode (powers them on) and migrates virtual machines, using VMotion, to them. When making

these calculations, VMware DPM considers not only current demand, but it also honors any user-specified

virtual machine resource reservations.

N

OTE

ESX/ESXi hosts cannot automatically be brought out of standby mode unless they are running in a

cluster managed by vCenter Server.

vSphere Resource Management Guide

62

VMware, Inc.

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