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vSphere High Performance Cookbook

You're reading from   vSphere High Performance Cookbook A cookbook is the ideal way to learn a tool as complex as vSphere. Through experiencing the real-world recipes in this tutorial you'll gain deep insight into vSphere's unique attributes and reach a high level of proficiency.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782170006
Length 240 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Prasenjit Sarkar Prasenjit Sarkar
Author Profile Icon Prasenjit Sarkar
Prasenjit Sarkar
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

vSphere High Performance Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. CPU Performance Design FREE CHAPTER 2. Memory Performance Design 3. Networking Performance Design 4. DRS, SDRS, and Resource Control Design 5. vSphere Cluster Design 6. Storage Performance Design 7. Designing vCenter and vCenter Database for Best Performance 8. Virtual Machine and Application Performance Design Index

vNUMA (Virtual NUMA) considerations


Non Uniform Memory Access also known as NUMA is designed with memory locality in mind so that pools of adjacent memory are placed in islands called NUMA nodes. Each of today's CPUs has multiple cores but that does not always result in a NUMA node with a given number of cores and RAM. It is the Integrated Memory Controller who decides that. There are multi-core CPU's that are not NUMA aware (original XEON 7300/7400 CPU's, for example), however on a different note, in a Nehalem-EX systems if it has four sockets each with 8 cores for a total of 32 cores and 256GB of RAM total, it would mean that each socket had 64GB of RAM.

What if your VM needs to be bigger than a NUMA node? One of the great new features in vSphere 5 is vNUMA or the ability for NUMA to be presented inside the VM to the guest OS.

vNUMA is designed for modern OS's that are NUMA aware and can make intelligent page management decisions based on locality.

Legacy OS functions in a similar manner...

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