The forum is down, for a unkown reason, thats what I get for free.
I’ll post when I find it back up.
Veeam has a new product titled : Veeam Monitor 3.0 Free Edition
I am currently testing this with my ESXi Boxes, I will report how it go’s
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The Veeam Monitor Free Edition is an easy-to-use VMware monitoring solution designed to meet the day-to-day needs of VMware administrators who need real-time performance monitoring and alerting. Built from the ground up specifically for the virtual world, Veeam Monitor provides a bird’s-eye view of key performance metrics across your virtual ESXi infrastructure.
With Veeam Monitor, you can view real-time resource usage data for any virtual infrastructure object or collection of objects, as well as known infrastructure events, all on a single screen. This allows you to finally see your virtual infrastructure as a unified entity, not just a collection of isolated hosts and guests.
Features and Benefits
* Performance monitoring
Veeam Monitor provides comprehensive data on resource consumption and workload, from VirtualCenter, or ESX and ESXi hosts all the way down to the individual virtual machine level. Detailed real-time statistics are provided for key parameters critical to the health of the virtual environment, such as CPU and memory usage, disk and network I/O, and swap usage. Real-time data for multiple VI objects can be viewed in a convenient consolidated view for each ESX host, resource pool or cluster. This speeds up analysis and troubleshooting, and helps you identify potential resource bottlenecks faster than is possible using the Virtual Infrastructure Client.
* Correlation of event and performance data
Veeam Monitor helps you understand how virtual infrastructure activities affect your VM performance, and solve resource usage mysteries with real-time monitoring graphs displaying known virtual infrastructure events, such as VMotion, snapshot creation and deletion, or backup activities, directly on the performance graphs.
* User interface optimized for monitoring
The Veeam Monitor user interface was designed and optimized specifically for monitoring tasks. You can switch easily between different views to quickly find the VMware Infrastructure component you are looking for, or you can perform an integrated search. Drill down to an individual VM and find out how much CPU and memory it is consuming, and even connect to the VM console – all right from the Monitor user interface. Find out at a glance which components of your VMware infrastructure are the largest resource consumers: the Tops section of Veeam Monitor helps you identify which virtual machines are consuming the most CPU, memory, disk I/O and network resources.
* Advanced alerting and flexible alarms
Veeam Monitor provides comprehensive alerting with custom alarms that can be based on many sources. You can easily set up e-mail notifications or SNMP traps for important events such as a given number of running VMs is exceeded, VM heartbeat is lost, a specific event is generated by VirtualCenter etc. Being alerted on such events allows for faster administrator response to critical issues, helping you to maintain better health and uptime of your virtual infrastructure. The Free Edition allows you to set and use up to ten alarms.
* Scalable architecture
Veeam Monitor is an enterprise-level client-server application that enables multi-admin access to performance data without affecting ESX server and VirtualCenter performance or changing your access policies. It gathers all performance information into a local or remote SQL database, allowing users to access infrastructure-wide performance data and reporting as needed. While you are using the Free Edition, this data is still gathered, so that if you later choose to upgrade to the full Veeam Monitor, you will have access to this historical data for capacity planning, chargeback and trend analysis.
* Support for multiple VirtualCenters
Veeam Monitor can be optionally integrated with VMware VirtualCenter to provide cluster-aware monitoring of your virtual machines. Veeam Monitor supports and extends VMware’s management framework, offloading the monitoring burden from VirtualCenter for enhanced VC performance. And with support for consolidating performance data from multiple VirtualCenters, Veeam Monitor shows performance data from your entire virtual infrastructure on a single screen – no matter how large your VMware deployment is.
* Easy to deploy and use
While providing you truly enterprise-scale architecture, Veeam Monitor has extremely low system requirements comparing to other VMware monitoring solutions. Veeam Monitor takes minutes to deploy and use in any size environment. Installation package contains everything you need to start using the software right away, minutes after you download it!
* Simple upgrade to the full version
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I was browsing the net looking for ESXi configuration information and found this : VMware® ESXi Dell Solution Guide @ Dell’s Website.
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VMware® ESXi Dell Solution Guide
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There is some good information here, both on configuration’s for ESXi, and Dell Specific information.
Full Post : http://support.dell.com/support/edocs/software/eslvmwre/EN/VES_3i/Solutions%20Guide/HTML/body.htm
I started some forum posts, to get things started.
If you have idea’s for Blogs please, post them as well, and we’ll post them up ( well, if they are reasonable , haha )
Thanks, I hope this allows us to make the blog more personable, while also letting the reader’s to get some input.
I have crated a Forum for this blog, Roger Lund ‘ s IT and VMware / Virtualization Forum
Full Link is http://rlit.forumaster.net/index.php
I wanted a place for Viewers to make new topics. I wanted Viewers to be able to Post questions to me, or others also.
I hope this will allow for that.
Please post! and Leave comments on your thoughts.
Leo’s Ramblings’s has a blog post on EMC ‘s best practices for Qlogic HBA ‘s and CX-series arrays titled : EMC storage arrays and QLogic HBAs
I have found that EMC documenation can be hard to find it when you need it, ( at least from a public side ) and therefor, I thought I’d post this.
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Very few people know, but EMC put out a guide on best practice HBA settings for their CX-series of arrays.
Not only can adhering to their standards, improve peroformance, but it can also provide for a more stable and less problematic system.
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Please Refer to the full post for the configuration recommendations.
Full Post : http://blog.core-it.com.au/?p=383
Notable KB Articles from the week by The VMguy
This is a direct quote, as I fall under the SMB world, and i believe at least some of my reader’s do as well.
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Here’s a few that are new or updated this week for SMB customers that I thought had really good value:
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Thanks to The VMguy for taking time and putting in the work for this.
Full Post : http://vmguy.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/347
blog.scottlowe.org has a post that sum’s up the various network articles on the blog titled : VMware ESX Networking Articles
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Over the past few years—almost four years now that I’ve been writing here on this site—I’ve written quite a few articles on VMware ESX networking. Here’s a collection of links to some of the more notable, and hopefully more useful, articles in that group.”
Here are the notable links, but please read the full blog post.
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VMware ESX, NIC teaming, and VLAN trunking
VMware ESX, NIC teaming, and VLAN trunking with HP ProCurve
VMware ESX and the native VLAN
NIC utilization in VMware ESX, and then provided a follow up post
using the CLI to change the vSwitch load balancing policy
CLI guide to modify a port group
configuring VMware ESX, IP-based storage, and jumbo frames
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What a great resource, thanks to the author.
Full Post : http://blog.scottlowe.org/2008/12/19/vmware-esx-networking-articles/
http://blog.zenoss.com/ has a new post I thought would be worth checking out titled : Zenoss on the Linux Basement
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I recently got the opportunity to appear on The Linux Basement podcast, in an interview about Zenoss. We got to meet the host Chad Wollenberg at the Ohio LinuxFest back in October and we were looking forward to finally getting on the show
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Thanks to Matt.
Full post http://blog.zenoss.com/2008/12/18/zenoss-on-the-linux-basement/