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    Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance

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    • K
      krisleslie
      last edited by

      Create a new SR? Wouldn't that break something? I'm confident when adding a single or more hard drive to the SR. I'm not very confident when we talking about the RAID 🙂 it doesn't seem to make sense.

      DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DustinB3403D
        DustinB3403 @krisleslie
        last edited by

        @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

        Create a new SR? Wouldn't that break something? I'm confident when adding a single or more hard drive to the SR. I'm not very confident when we talking about the RAID 🙂 it doesn't seem to make sense.

        You need to create a new SR or expand the existing one. It's a logical volume on top of the block device.

        Since expanding a production LV is likely more risky, it's easier to just create a new storage repository on your block device.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @krisleslie
          last edited by

          @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

          Create a new SR? Wouldn't that break something? I'm confident when adding a single or more hard drive to the SR. I'm not very confident when we talking about the RAID 🙂 it doesn't seem to make sense.

          It's all making perfect sense. Thinking of RAID as a special case is confusing you.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @krisleslie
            last edited by

            @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

            @scottalanmiller on one of our servers it's properly done. One the other not so much. I'm going to get the dell engineer I originally worked with to fix the one that isn't working right. So when we use Dell's tool to look at the raid it shows the proper capacity expansion on one server. The other server doesn't show the increase.

            Oh, that would cause an issue if it didn't really expand.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @krisleslie
              last edited by

              @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

              When I go into Xen Center, it doesn't "dynamically" see the adjust space. So I see what you're saying I was hoping it would automagically be there, not the case. So how do I get it to add it?

              First you have to add it in the LVM on the RAID controller after the RAID is expanded. THEN you can look at growing what XC sees.

              DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • notverypunnyN
                notverypunny @krisleslie
                last edited by

                @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender @notverypunny
                  last edited by

                  @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                  @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                  @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                  I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                  In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                  This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                  DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DashrenderD
                    Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                    @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                    When I go into Xen Center, it doesn't "dynamically" see the adjust space. So I see what you're saying I was hoping it would automagically be there, not the case. So how do I get it to add it?

                    First you have to add it in the LVM on the RAID controller after the RAID is expanded. THEN you can look at growing what XC sees.

                    RAID controller - grow RAID 10 from 4 to 6 disks (or whatever new number you have)
                    RAID controller - Use LVM to grow the virtual disk the RAID controller presents to Xen Server
                    Xen Server - Use LVM to grow the SR to include the new space it sees now.
                    Xen Server - do whatever you need for the VMs to use the new space.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • DustinB3403D
                      DustinB3403 @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                      @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                      @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                      @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                      I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                      In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                      This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                      You wouldn't need to add a new disk to the VM to add a vPBD to the hypervisor. You can have the VDI on any SR and "expand" another disks on the VM.

                      But that's besides the point.

                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender @DustinB3403
                        last edited by

                        @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                        @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                        @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                        @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                        @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                        I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                        In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                        This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                        You wouldn't need to add a new disk to the VM to add a vPBD to the hypervisor. You can have the VDI on any SR and "expand" another disks on the VM.

                        But that's besides the point.

                        Grow across the SRs? OK cool.

                        DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DustinB3403D
                          DustinB3403 @Dashrender
                          last edited by

                          @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                          @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                          @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                          @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                          @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                          @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                          I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                          In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                          This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                          You wouldn't need to add a new disk to the VM to add a vPBD to the hypervisor. You can have the VDI on any SR and "expand" another disks on the VM.

                          But that's besides the point.

                          Grow across the SRs? OK cool.

                          Yeah, the VM doesn't know any different. Is it normal? Probably, considering the limitations of the file system. 2TB - 4GB per VDI.

                          DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @DustinB3403
                            last edited by

                            @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                            @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                            I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                            In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                            This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                            You wouldn't need to add a new disk to the VM to add a vPBD to the hypervisor. You can have the VDI on any SR and "expand" another disks on the VM.

                            But that's besides the point.

                            Grow across the SRs? OK cool.

                            Yeah, the VM doesn't know any different. Is it normal? Probably, considering the limitations of the file system. 2TB - 4GB per VDI.

                            4 GB?

                            VDI - I'm super rusty with my Xen Server speak - VDI is the disk file on the SR, right? They are limited to 4 GB?

                            DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DustinB3403D
                              DustinB3403 @Dashrender
                              last edited by

                              @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @Dashrender said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @notverypunny said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                              @notverypunny See I want to get on the latest and greatest release. I just want to avoid having to nuke everything.

                              I feel your pain, but in the interests of being able to sleep at night you might be better off moving your stuff and starting from scratch.

                              In your position I would have created a new virtual disk on the raid controller and added it as a new SR, mainly because I've never considered the option of expanding an existing volume, seems risky without any real benefit that I can see right off the bat.

                              This assumes you can just add more mountpoints to whatever VMs he's using. In some situations you simply want to grow the disk you're using, not add a whole new disk to the VM.

                              You wouldn't need to add a new disk to the VM to add a vPBD to the hypervisor. You can have the VDI on any SR and "expand" another disks on the VM.

                              But that's besides the point.

                              Grow across the SRs? OK cool.

                              Yeah, the VM doesn't know any different. Is it normal? Probably, considering the limitations of the file system. 2TB - 4GB per VDI.

                              4 GB?

                              VDI - I'm super rusty with my Xen Server speak - VDI is the disk file on the SR, right? They are limited to 4 GB?

                              No, its 2TB minus 4GBs so 1.96TB per VDI.

                              It's a FS limit that is actively being worked on by a lot of people because it's annoying.

                              (old documentation but relevant for what we're discussing)
                              https://docs.citrix.com/en-us/legacy-archive/downloads/xs-configuration-limits-6-2.pdf

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • 1
                                1337
                                last edited by 1337

                                I actually question the reasoning behind upgrading a R710 server in the first place. It's just too old. It has Nehalem 5500/5600 series CPUs. That's 6 generations old Xeons. Back when 4-core and 6-core where highest core count. Great if you like to spend money on electricity and cooling, otherwise not so great.

                                It would have been better value for money to get something newer and move the VMs instead. And low budget is not an excuse really as you can get refurbished servers with warranty for low prices. Something like a R720 for instance or newer.

                                So put new disks in a new/refurbished server and move the VMs. When everything is up and running and looking good, just wipe the disks and ebay the old server.

                                DustinB3403D K 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • DustinB3403D
                                  DustinB3403 @1337
                                  last edited by

                                  @Pete-S That would have very easily been a much cleaner approach to this. I don't know if there was some sort of budget constraint but, clean is always the best if possible.

                                  1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • 1
                                    1337 @DustinB3403
                                    last edited by 1337

                                    @DustinB3403 said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                                    @Pete-S That would have very easily been a much cleaner approach to this. I don't know if there was some sort of budget constraint but, clean is always the best if possible.

                                    Agreed. My thoughts are:

                                    • If you have no budget then do nothing
                                    • If you have a small budget then make sure you get the most value for the little money you have
                                    • If you don't have enough budget to get a good return on your investment then wait until you do

                                    Some cost saving measures are just too expensive if you look at the total cost and what you get in return. More so for a non-profit that has to use each dollar wisely.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                    • K
                                      krisleslie @1337
                                      last edited by

                                      @Pete-S you may missed it but I have 2 newer servers R530's. The R710 (or even a R720) would be there basically to be a point to back up to while I fix the storage situation. Power cost is a big deal but its one that is a moot point in my situation. I of course would put new disks in it. The point of the 3rd server would only again but for barely if anything but just a way to push my vm's to it while I deal with the storage situation of the actual main servers.

                                      I actually have an older Power Edge T110 i, but I took it off site. So if it weren't for that I'd actually be using it in the place. The R710 (or 720) are both way more powerful than what I have available. I'm not trying to have anything but maybe 2-4 vms running anyways, and they aren't powerful vms. Were talking AD, FS etc.

                                      Otherwise I need some major help on trying to get what Scott is saying I need done. I think Scott hit it on the head, I just don't know where to start.

                                      DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DustinB3403D
                                        DustinB3403 @krisleslie
                                        last edited by DustinB3403

                                        @krisleslie create a NEW SR on your xenserver installation. We already went over this. Don't "expand" the existing storage as you're adding complexity.

                                        chrome_CCN6CmXcNg.png

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @krisleslie
                                          last edited by

                                          @krisleslie said in Having sluggish performance on my Xen Server VM's, looking for suggestions to boost performance:

                                          Otherwise I need some major help on trying to get what Scott is saying I need done. I think Scott hit it on the head, I just don't know where to start.

                                          You mean with adding the logical volume on the RAID controller?

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