Thursday, July 31, 2008

HA Advance feature

Some of the HA Advance feature is smartly stolen from Help file and some are from
vmug.

Configuring Advanced HA Options

The Advanced Options (HA) dialog box lets you set advanced configuration options for HA.

To set advanced options for HA

  1. In the Cluster Settings dialog box, select the VMware HA option.

  1. Click the Advanced Options button to open the Advanced Options (HA) dialog box.

  1. Enter each advanced attribute you want to change in a text box in the Option column and the value it should be set in the Value column.

  1. Click OK.

The following table lists some of the available advanced HA attributes.

Attribute

Description

das.isolationaddress

Sets the address to ping to determine if a host is isolated from the network. If this option is not specified, the default gateway of the console network is used. This default gateway has to be some reliable address that is available, so that the host can determine if it is isolated from the network.

das.defaultfailoverhost

If this is set, HA tries to fail over hosts to the host specified by this option. This attribute is useful to utilize one host as a spare failover host, but is not recommended, because HA tries to utilize all available spare capacity among all hosts in the cluster. If the specified host does not have enough spare capacity, HA tries to fail over the virtual machine to any other host in the cluster that has enough capacity.

das.failuredetectiontime

Changes the default failure detection time (with a default of 15000 milliseconds, or 15 seconds). This is the time period when a host has received no heartbeats from another host, that it waits before declaring the other host dead.

das.failuredetectioninverval

Changes the heartbeat interval among HA hosts. By default, this occurs every second.

das.usedefaultisolationaddress

By default, HA uses the default gateway of the console network as an isolation address. This attribute specifies whether that should be used (true|false).

das.poweroffonisolation

Changes the default cluster behavior for Isolation Response. By default, the Isolation Response is to power off a virtual machine when a host is isolated from the network (true).

das.restartpriority

Changes the restart priority for the cluster. Options are disabled|low|medium|high. Default is medium.

das.vmMemoryMinMB

Specifies the minimum amount of memory (in megabytes (MB)) sufficient for any virtual machine in the cluster to be usable. This value is used only if the memory reservation is not specified for the virtual machine and is used for HA admission control and calculating the current failover level. If no value is specified, the default is 128MB.

das.vmCpuMinMHz

Specifies the minimum amount of CPU (in megahertz (MHz)) sufficient for any virtual machine in the cluster to be usable. This value is used only if the CPU reservation is not specified for the virtual machine and is used for HA admission control and calculating the current failover level. If no value is specified, the default is 128MHz.

das.failuredetectioninterval

<millisecs>

das.failureinterval

<millisecs>

das.tracelevel

0 | functiontracing

das.traceoutput

stdout

das.consoleperm

perm_all | perm_oper | perm_user

das.consolenode

<fqdn>

das.consoleuser

<username>

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

OSI model and IP Subneeting

Every time I use to go for interview and I have to struggle to find for document about OSI layer and Network Subnetting. So I thought of putting it on my blog and let be remain for ever on my website.


Male Priorities

I was send few files from my friend and would like to share with every one who happen to land up on my blog accidently . Girls always have bad idea about guy and think that nuts are always behind blah blah thing but it is not always true. Please check this to confirm it 





Monday, July 28, 2008

What is PF Usages under Task Manager



I had been asked following by one of the DBA about PF Usages under task manager.

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The reason I am asking..is that the PK usage on one of my boxes is 29 gig..but when I look at what was allocated ..it was on the c drive with 2 gig allocated..so I am confused.

Can you please shed some light?




I was sure what “PF Usage” shows here is some kind of aggregate value so I “googled” for it and found the following explanation on one of the forum

Per Windows Internals Chapter 7: Memory Management -> Page Fault Handling:

Note that the Mem Usage bar (called PF Usage in Windows XP and Windows Server 2003) is actually the system commit total. This number represents potential page file usage, not actual page file usage. It is how much page file space would be used if all the private committed virtual memory in the system had to be paged out all at once.

This makes lots of sense to me and my wild guess was correct.



My Collage

This was my beloved collage and if I can do anything for this collage I am available for it (a small tribute to Lord Manujunatheshwara)