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New VOBs for creating vCenter Server alarms in vSphere 6.0

03.02.2015 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

Here are some new VOBs in vSphere 6.0 that I recently came across which can be useful on getting notified on specific events such failed login attempts in ESXi or detecting a device has gone offline in VSAN as some examples. These VOBs can be used to create vCenter Server alarms to take various actions such as a simple UI notification in the vSphere Web/C# Client to sending an email or SNMP trap regarding the event. For more information on how create vCenter Server alarms using VOBs, please take a look at these two articles here and here which also includes a comprehensive list of past vSphere VOBs in vSphere 5.5 which are still applicable in vSphere 6.0.

General vSphere 6.0 VOBs

VOB ID VOB Description
esx.audit.account.locked Remote access for an ESXi local user account has been locked temporarilly due to multiple failed login attempts.
esx.audit.account.loginfailures Multiple remote login failures detected for an ESXi local user account.
esx.audit.esxcli.host.restart Rebooting host through esxcli
esx.audit.lockdownmode.exceptions.changed List of lockdown exception users has been changed.
esx.problem.coredump.copyspace The free space available in default coredump copy location is insufficient to copy new coredumps.
esx.problem.coredump.extraction.failed.nospace The given partition has insufficient amount of free space to extract the coredump.
esx.problem.dhclient.lease.offered.error No expiry time on offered DHCP lease.
esx.problem.pageretire.selectedbutnotretired.high Number of host physical memory pages that have been selected for retirement but could not yet be retired is high.
esx.problem.swap.systemSwap.isPDL.cannot.remove System swap at path {1} was affected by the PDL of its datastore and was removed. System swap has been reconfigured.
esx.problem.swap.systemSwap.isPDL.removed.reconfig.failure System swap at path {1} was affected by the PDL of its datastore. It was removed but the subsequent reconfiguration failed.
esx.problem.vmfs.ats.incompatibility.detected Multi-extent ATS-only VMFS Volume unable to use ATS
esx.problem.vmfs.lockmode.inconsistency.detected Inconsistent VMFS lockmode detected.
esx.problem.vmfs.spanned.lockmode.inconsistency.detected Inconsistent VMFS lockmode detected on spanned volume.
esx.problem.vmfs.spanstate.incompatibility.detected Incompatible VMFS span state detected.
esx.vFlash.VFlashResourceCapacityExtendedEvent vFlash resource capacity is extended
vprob.vmfs.heartbeat.corruptondisk VMFS Heartbeat Corruption Detected

VSAN 6.0 VOBs

VOB ID VOB Description
esx.audit.vsan.net.vnic.added Virtual SAN virtual NIC has been added.
esx.audit.vsan.net.vnic.deleted Virtual SAN network configuration has been removed.
esx.problem.vob.vsan.dom.lsefixed Virtual SAN detected and fixed a medium error on disk.
esx.problem.vob.vsan.dom.nospaceduringresync Resync encountered no space error
esx.problem.vob.vsan.lsom.disklimit2 Failed to add disk to disk group.
esx.problem.vsan.dom.init.failed.status Virtual SAN Distributed Object Manager failed to initialize
vprob.vob.vsan.pdl.offline Virtual SAN device has gone offline.

Categories // ESXi, VSAN, vSphere 6.0 Tags // alarm, vob, VSAN, vSphere 6.0

Updated VSAN 6.0 Nested ESXi OVF Templates for 64 Nodes, All-Flash Array & Fault Domain Testing

02.12.2015 by William Lam // 22 Comments

During the development of vSphere & VSAN 6.0, I built several new OVF templates to be able to help quickly deploy different configurations of VSAN to help test and provide feedback to Engineering. I figure I would share out these new templates as it may also benefit others in the community who wish to quickly setup VSAN 6.0 and give it spin in their own home lab or development environment using Nested ESXi.

Disclaimer: Nested ESXi is not officially supported by VMware, please use at your own risk.

One thing to be aware of when running VSAN 6.0 using Nested ESXi is that you will need a minimum of 6GB of memory for each ESXi VM. If you wish to run additional workloads on top or create larger VSAN Clusters, you may need to add additional memory on each ESXi VM. This is not really a problem for real physical hardware but can be a problem for smaller lab environments when running Nested ESXi.

Here are the four new VSAN 6.0 Nested ESXi OVF Templates:

  • Nested-ESXi-3-Node-VSAN-6.0-Template - This is a standard 3-Node VSAN OVF
  • Nested-ESXi-3-Node-VSAN-6.0-All-Flash-Template - This is a standard 3-Node VSAN with both disk2 & 3 set as an SSD for All-Flash configuration (Check out this blog article on steps of setting up an All-Flash VSAN environment)
  • Nested-ESXi-6-Node-VSAN-6.0-FD-Template - This is a 6-Node VSAN which can be useful when wanting to test out VSAN's new Fault Domain (aka Rack Aware) feature
  • Nested-ESXi-64-Node-VSAN-6.0-Template - This is mind-blowing 64-Node VSAN OVF! Can you handle all this awesomeness? If you can, would love to see you share some screenshots 🙂

Note: If you decide to build a 64-Node Cluster, you will need run the following ESXCLI command (reboot is required) to go beyond 32 nodes up to 64 node:

esxcli system settings advanced set -o /VSAN/goto11 -i 1

Here is a few screenshots of running VSAN 6.0 using the above OVF Templates:

vsan-6.0-nested-esxi
vsan-6.0-fault-domain

Categories // ESXi, VSAN, vSphere 6.0

How to configure an All-Flash VSAN 6.0 Configuration using Nested ESXi?

02.11.2015 by William Lam // 11 Comments

There has been a great deal of interest from customers and partners for an All-Flash VSAN configuration, especially as consumer grade SSDs (eMLC) continue to drop in price and the endurance levels of these devices lasting much longer than originally expected as mentioned in this article by Duncan Epping. In fact, last year at VMworld the folks over at Micron and SanDisk built and demoed an All-Flash VSAN configuration proving this was not only cost effective but also quite performant. You can read more about the details here and here. With the announcement of vSphere 6 this week and VMware Partner Exchange taking place the same week, there was a lot of excitement on what VSAN 6.0 might bring.

One of the coolest feature in VSAN 6.0 is the support for an All-Flash configuration. The folks over at Sandisk gave a sneak peak at VMware Partner Exchange couple weeks back on what they were able to accomplish with VSAN 6.0 using an All-Flash configuration. They achieved an impressive 2 Million IOPs, for more details take a look here. I am pretty sure there are going to be plenty more partner announcements as we get closer to the GA of vSphere 6 and there will be a list of supported vendors and devices on the VMware VSAN HCL, so stay tuned.

To easily demonstrate this new feature, I will be using Nested ESXi but the process to configure an All-Flash VSAN configuration is exactly the same for a real physical hardware setup. Nested ESXi is a great learning tool to understand and be able to walk through the exact process but should not be a substituted for actual hardware testing. You will need a minimum of 3 Nested ESXi hosts and they should be configured with at least 6GB of memory or more when working with VSAN 6.0.

Disclaimer: Nested ESXi is not officially supported by VMware, please use at your own risk.

In VSAN 1.0, an All-Flash configuration was not officially supported, the only way to get this working was by "tricking" ESXi into thinking the SSD's used for capacity tier are MD's by creating claimrules using ESXCLI. Though this method had worked, VSAN itself was assuming the capacity tier of storage are regular magnetic disks and hence the operations were not really optimized for anything but magnetic disks. With VSAN 6.0, this is now different and VSAN will optimize based on whether are you using using a hybrid or an All-Flash configuration. In VSAN 6.0, there is now a new property called IsCapacityFlash that is exposed and it allows a user to specify whether an SSD is used for the write buffer or for capacity purposes.

Screen Shot 2015-02-10 at 10.01.12 PM
Step 1 - We can easily view the IsCapacityFlash property by using our handy vdq VSAN utility which has now been enhanced to include a few more properties. Run the following command to view your disks:

vdq -q

all-flash-vsan-6
From the screenshot above, we can see we have two disks eligible for VSAN and that they both are SSDs. We can also see thew new IsCapacityFlash property which is currently set to 0 for both. We will want to select one of the disk(s) and set this property to 1 to enable it for capacity use within VSAN.

Step 2 - Identity the SSD device(s) you wish to use for your capacity tier, a very simple to do this is by using the following ESXCLI snippet:

esxcli storage core device list  | grep -iE '(   Display Name: |   Size: )'

all-flash-vsan-1
We can quickly get a list of the devices and their ID along with their disk capacity. In the example above, I will be using the 8GB device for SSD capacity

Step 3 - Once you have identified the device(s) from the previous step, we now need to add a new option called enable_capacity_flash to these device(s) using ESXCLI. There are actually three methods of assigning the capacity flash tag to a device and both provide the same end result. Personally, I would go with Option 2 as it is much simpler to remember than syntax for claimrules 🙂 If you have the ESXi hosts connected to your vCenter Server, then Option 3 would be great as you can perform this step from a single location.

Option 1: ESXCLI Claim Rules

Run the following two ESXCLI commands for each device you wish to mark for SSD capacity:

esxcli storage nmp satp rule add -s VMW_SATP_LOCAL -d naa.6000c295be1e7ac4370e6512a0003edf -o enable_capacity_flash
esxcli storage core claiming reclaim -d naa.6000c295be1e7ac4370e6512a0003edf

all-flash-vsan-2
Option 2: ESXCLI using new VSAN tagging command

esxcli vsan storage tag add -d naa.6000c295be1e7ac4370e6512a0003edf -t capacityFlash

Option 3: RVC using new vsan.host_claim_disks_differently command

vsan.host_claim_disks_differently --disk naa.6000c295be1e7ac4370e6512a0003edf --claim-type capacity_flash

Step 4 - To verify the changes took effect, we can re-run the vdq -q command and we should now see our device(s) marked for SSD capacity.

all-flash-vsan-3
Step 5 - You can now create your VSAN Cluster using the vSphere Web Client as you normally would and add the ESXi host into the cluster or you can bootstrap it using ESXCLI if you are trying to run vCenter Server on top of VSAN, for more details take a look here.

One thing that I found interesting is that in the vSphere Web Client when setting up an All-Flash VSAN configuration, the SSD(s) used for capacity will still show up as "HDD". I am not sure if this is what the final UI will look like before vSphere 6.0 GA's.

all-flash-vsan-4
If you want to check the actual device type, you can always go to a specific ESXi host under Manage->Storage->Storage Devices to see get more details. If we look at our NAA* device ID, we can see that both devices are in fact SSDs.

all-flash-vsan-5
Hopefully for those of you interested in an All-Flash VSAN configuration, you can now quickly get a feel for that running VSAN 6.0 in a Nested ESXi environment. I will be publishing updated OVF templates for various types of VSAN 6.0 testing in the coming weeks so stay tune.

Categories // ESXi, Nested Virtualization, VSAN, vSphere 6.0 Tags // enable_capacity_flash, esxcli, IsCapacityFlash, Virtual SAN, VSAN, vSphere 6.0

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William is Distinguished Platform Engineering Architect in the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Division at Broadcom. His primary focus is helping customers and partners build, run and operate a modern Private Cloud using the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) platform.

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