Thanks
Josh
On 1/10/07, Ross S. W. Walker <rwalker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ross S. W. Walker
> Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2007 12:07 AM
> To: CentOS mailing list
> Subject: RE: VMWare GSX Server and CentOS
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx
> > [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John R Pierce
> > Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 11:53 PM
> > To: CentOS mailing list
> > Subject: Re: VMWare GSX Server and CentOS
> >
> > Joshua Gimer wrote:
> > > Has anyone had experience (good or bad) with VMWare GSX
> > Server running
> > > CentOS as a VM under high load?
> > >
> > > Here is the situation. We are planning on rolling out some
> > new boxes
> > > to replace an existing box. Currently this box (Sun V860)
> > is running
> > > web services, database services, mail for students, and is an
> > > instructional box for compiling code, and web scripting
> among other
> > > things.
> > >
> > > We are planning on doing one of two things, either using
> VMWare and
> > > splitting up the services or using Solaris Zones. The
> > box(s) has to be
> > > able to access data stored on the SAN (Fiber Channel HBA's). The
> > > boxes(VM's), or Zones would be split up accordingly:
> > >
> > > Database box: Oracle, Postgres, and MySQL
> > > Mail: Sendmail, POPS, and IMAPS (roughly 25,000 mailboxes)
> > > Web: Apache, PHP, mod_ssl
> > > Interactive Logins: Compilers and such.
> > >
> > > Any information about any experiences with VMWare and
> CentOS, under
> > > similar load would be helpful. I will probably make this
> > same post on
> > > the Sun Solaris Mailing List, and VMWare's forums. Thanks
> > in advance!
> >
> > I dunno, but I'm curious why you want to run so many VMs' or
> > zones?
> > the database/mail/web stuff would probably all run most
> > efficiently in
> > the 'host' OS... I can see some advantages to running student
> > interactive logins in a VM or zone for security isolation.
> >
> >
> > its that, or I'd put the infrastructure things (email, school web,
> > school databases) on a dedicated and secure hardware
> > platform, then put
> > all the instructional stuff on a seperate hardware platform.
> > I don't
> > like having too many eggs in one basket.
>
> I agree keep the infrastructure stuff physically separate from the
> student stuff. That said, say a 4 node cluster for
> infrastructure stuff
> running VMs on each node in a scenario where the other nodes can take
> over VMs from a failed node. Have them run to Fiber storage
> or some kind
> of SAN and you should be all set.
>
> For student stuff you can run a separate cluster using VMs
> for different
> courses, maybe Vmware, maybe Xen whichever works for you.
>
> CentOS should be able to handle all that very well, it is
> after all RHEL
> and has been tuned for heavy duty workloads.
>
> -Ross
Actually re-reading my post let me say the infrastructure cluster can
run the database/mail/web on the host OS as the previous poster said and
gain significant performance. Have the host services fail-over in the
cluster for continuity.
Xen/Vmare VMs for student course work is probably best as they can be
rapidly deployed and varied in configuration.
-Ross
-Ross
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--
Thx
Joshua Gimer
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