New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster
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@FATeknollogee just a regular libvirt/KVM usually. If there is a multivendor virt environment, I install the engine in the second setup (vmware/hyper-v) and often the vCenter is installed in RHV
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@dyasny Next time I do HE, I think I'll install it as a separate VM instead of the vm inside a vm approach.
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@FATeknollogee that really depends on your cluster size. If you can afford to dedicate a separate host to it, then why not. Besides scalability, your main benefit will be not having to deal with all the hosted-engine clustering overhead. It really makes life simpler
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@FATeknollogee that really depends on your cluster size. If you can afford to dedicate a separate host to it, then why not.
You mean a separate host where the HE vm lives on?
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@FATeknollogee said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@FATeknollogee that really depends on your cluster size. If you can afford to dedicate a separate host to it, then why not.
You mean a separate host where the HE vm lives on?
Yes, it's your choice whether to do it in a VM though, it can be on baremetal
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@FATeknollogee said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@FATeknollogee that really depends on your cluster size. If you can afford to dedicate a separate host to it, then why not.
You mean a separate host where the HE vm lives on?
Yes, it's your choice whether to do it in a VM though, it can be on baremetal
Is doing it in a vm bad? That would be my choice unless there is some compelling reason to do it baremetal.
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@FATeknollogee doing it in a VM is convenient. You can always move that VM to another host, you can easily back it up by copying it's disk and domxml, you can even easily set it up as an HA cluster with pacemaker protecting the libvirt service. Databases though, feel more convenient on baremetal, so if you're going to build something with hundreds of hosts, I'd suggest you invest in the engine host as well.
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@dyasny so to clarify for me, as i'm fighting a headache.
This design is similar to that of ESXi with vsphere.In that you should have 3 physical hosts, and 1 of which is installed with the vSphere service.
Correct?
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@DustinB3403 no, in this particular setup, you have two options. The original one would be to go hyperconverged, installing both the storage and hypervisors services on all 3 hosts, and to also deploy the engine (vsphere equivalent) as a VM in the setup (that's called self hosted engine).
The better option, IMO, is to use two hosts as hypervisors, and the third - pack with disks, and use as the storage device (NFS or iSCSI). And also install the engine on it, as a VM or on baremetal - doesn't matter.
You will have less hypervisors, true, but having a storage service on the hypervisors is a resource drain, so you don't actually lose as much in terms of resources. And you gain a proper storage server, less management headache, and a setup that can scale nicely if you decide to add hypervisors or buy a real SAN. Performance will also be better, and you might even end up with more available disk space, because you will not have to keep 3 replicas of every byte like gluster/ceph require you to do.
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@DustinB3403 no, in this particular setup, you have two options. The original one would be to go hyperconverged, installing both the storage and hypervisors services on all 3 hosts, and to also deploy the engine (vsphere equivalent) as a VM in the setup (that's called self hosted engine).
The better option, IMO, is to use two hosts as hypervisors, and the third - pack with disks, and use as the storage device (NFS or iSCSI). And also install the engine on it, as a VM or on baremetal - doesn't matter.
You will have less hypervisors, true, but having a storage service on the hypervisors is a resource drain, so you don't actually lose as much in terms of resources. And you gain a proper storage server, less management headache, and a setup that can scale nicely if you decide to add hypervisors or buy a real SAN. Performance will also be better, and you might even end up with more available disk space, because you will not have to keep 3 replicas of every byte like gluster/ceph require you to do.
Isn't that an IPOD though?
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@Dashrender said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
Isn't that an IPOD though?
It's a server, not an ipod. If you mean SPOF, then yes, if the entire server just dies, you lose the cluster. Obviously, the server itself can be backed up, clustered, and installed with redundant components to avoid that. It's all a matter of balancing between budget, the admin's level or paranoia, and the desire to have a reliable setup without working too hard. I really like the latter, and in the long run this approach has always served me and my customers very well.
These 3 factors are up to the OP of course. All I'm trying to say with my suggestion is that you're not saving anything by hyperconverging, because you ARE making the setup much more complex, with many more moving parts that require configuration, tuning, updates and server resources than you would have by just sticking to the KISS principle.
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IPOD = Inverted Pyramid of Doom.
This a term that Scott Allen Miller coined ages ago.1 - SAN
2 - Switches
2+ - serversThe general belief is that the SAN is 'so good' it will fail less frequently than the other components. Now - in your setup it might be as good as the servers, since it's not one of those manufactured typical SANs, but it's still just a server.
The general idea around these parts you don't go to centralized storage until you have at least 4 hypervisor hosts, otherwise putting storage locally is often much less expensive and less risky.
And of course, we haven't even touched on HA.
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
These 3 factors are up to the OP of course. All I'm trying to say with my suggestion is that you're not saving anything by hyperconverging, because you ARE making the setup much more complex, with many more moving parts that require configuration, tuning, updates and server resources than you would have by just sticking to the KISS principle.
I definitely like the simpler solution - local storage for local VMs. If you need to move VMs between hosts for maintenance - fine - make sure you have enough resources to do just that, then move them. But moving to shared storage at two compute nodes and basically wasting the compute of the third node doesn't make sense to me, not to mention putting yourself in an IPOD situation - where if you loose the disk, you loose both compute nodes.
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@Dashrender said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
IPOD = Inverted Pyramid of Doom.
This a term that Scott Allen Miller coined ages ago.I am not a part of the Scott Alan Miller quote club, sorry
1 - SAN
2 - Switches
2+ - serversThe general belief is that the SAN is 'so good' it will fail less frequently than the other components. Now - in your setup it might be as good as the servers, since it's not one of those manufactured typical SANs, but it's still just a server.
Well, yes. And we are talking about proper brand name servers. The Dell PE series pretty much in its entirety across all the generations I've worked with (starting with the 4th) have redundant power supplies, redundant and in some models hot-swappable RAM modules, hot swappable drives that can be used in a RAID, so you can tolerate outages. Not everything is replaceable on the fly and not everything is duplicated, but all the components that typically experience outages are. For everything else there is backup, and the aforementioned budget/paranoia/f&f balance to consider and maybe play with.
The general idea around these parts you don't go to centralized storage until you have at least 4 hypervisor hosts, otherwise putting storage locally is often much less expensive and less risky.
How is that calculated exactly?
And of course, we haven't even touched on HA.
oVirt provides HA out of the box, as long as a living host has enough resources available to start the protected VMs.
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@Dashrender said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
I definitely like the simpler solution - local storage for local VMs. If you need to move VMs between hosts for maintenance - fine - make sure you have enough resources to do just that, then move them. But moving to shared storage at two compute nodes and basically wasting the compute of the third node doesn't make sense to me, not to mention putting yourself in an IPOD situation - where if you loose the disk, you loose both compute nodes.
it is even easier this way, and you can even move those VMs around, but there will be no HA there. Migrating a local VM with it's storage is basically like live migrating a VM with the RAM size of the disk to be moved. Can take days on a gigabit link, if the disk is large. So again, it's about balance between factors. If HA doesn't matter, use local disks by all means. Just be sure to back up a lot, and you'll even get the benefit of faster disk access for the local VMs. Latency is key to some apps, so it might be a good thing
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@Dashrender said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
This a term that Scott Allen Miller coined ages ago.
No he didn't. Might be where you firs theard it, but it is not his.
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@JaredBusch said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@Dashrender said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
This a term that Scott Allen Miller coined ages ago.
No he didn't. Might be where you firs theard it, but it is not his.
Thanks I stand corrected.
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
I've never seen a well built SAN go completely down in over 20 years of working with them.
I have. Most SANs fail with reckless abandon. Really good ones are incredibly stable, but everything fails sometimes.
Now, in the storage industry, a "good SAN" would be defined as one that is a part of a cluster. No single box is every that reliable, even the best ones are easily subject to the forklift problem if nothing else.
SANs can approach mainframes in reliability, but to do so is so costly that no one does it. In the real world, that kind of storage carries really high risks and/or cost compared to other options.
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@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
On the other hand, hyperconvergence is a resource drain, with systems like gluster and ceph eating up resources they share with the hypervisor, with neither being aware of each other, and VMs end up murdered by OOM, or just stalled due to CPU overcommitment.
That's misleading. Much like how software RAID uses system resources, which is true. But the cost of creating good external resources is high and the internal needs are low and cheap to increase. Software RAID blows hardware RAID out of the water on performance, even when shared. And you just account for that in your planning.
And there is an assumption that hypervisors and storage are not aware. That can be true, but isn't necessarily. And if you use a SAN, it's guaranteed to be true.
So both of these points are selling points for HC, rather than against it.
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@scottalanmiller said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
@dyasny said in New Infrastructure to Replace Scale Cluster:
I've never seen a well built SAN go completely down in over 20 years of working with them.
I have. Most SANs fail with reckless abandon. Really good ones are incredibly stable, but everything fails sometimes.
Now, in the storage industry, a "good SAN" would be defined as one that is a part of a cluster. No single box is every that reliable, even the best ones are easily subject to the forklift problem if nothing else.
SANs can approach mainframes in reliability, but to do so is so costly that no one does it. In the real world, that kind of storage carries really high risks and/or cost compared to other options.
let me rephrase myself. I've seen disks, controllers, PSUs, even backplanes and mobos fail in SANs, None of that ever caused an actual outage.