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xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] How many guests
 
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 I'm confused: how are you going to connect a RAID10 via a network? Are you talking about a seperate storage server?
 
 ----- Original message -----
 > If I were to install a RAID10 array, would it be ok if I connected it to
 > my Xen host via gigabit ethernet?
 >
 >
 > On 06/06/10 22:21, Bart Coninckx wrote:
 > > RAID1 does not perform better than a single disk. It will still depend on what
 > > those 5 to 10 VMs would do. It still might be stretching it. For 10 webservers
 > > visited by 5 users per hour: I would say no problem. For 5 heavily used
 > > database servers it will be another story.
 > >
 > > I guess the only real way to find out is to put your guests on there and try.
 > > If you clone them, you will know quite fast.
 > >
 > >
 > > On Sunday 06 June 2010 21:38:54 Jonathan Tripathy wrote:
 > >     
 > > > Thanks Micael,
 > > >
 > > > I understand what you are saying.
 > > >
 > > > With a small setup such as a RAID1 array, how many VMs could I rent out?
 > > >
 > > > It doesn't matter if it's a small number, it's just to utilise the
 > > > server a bit.
 > > >
 > > > Think it would cope with 5-10?
 > > >
 > > > Thanks
 > > >
 > > > Jonathan
 > > >
 > > > On 06/06/10 20:18, Michael Schmidt wrote:
 > > >         
 > > > > Hi Jonathan,
 > > > >
 > > > > if you plan to migrate existing physical machines to xen VMs, or you
 > > > > have some different machines for a comparison,
 > > > > you can easy get runtime statistics and calculate the usage. Look at
 > > > > the running iostats and cpu usage.
 > > > >
 > > > > If you plan to rent generic VMs on this server to customers, you disk
 > > > > / raid setup will be absolutely the bottleneck.
 > > > > A solution at this point is not easy. If you have much write IOs, use
 > > > > raid 10 with 4 to 8 disks. With many reads - raid 6 or 50 with the
 > > > > same amount of disks.
 > > > > In each case i can suggest you 15k rpm SAS disks.
 > > > >
 > > > > Then you can run 29 VMs. Or 60 VMs with 16GB memory and 2 CPUs.
 > > > >
 > > > > But note: You cannot set disk priority to the VMs. So if one VM does
 > > > > heavy disk IO, all off the other VMs slowed down.
 > > > >
 > > > > Best Regards
 > > > >
 > > > > Michael Schmidt
 > > > >
 > > > > Am 06.06.10 20:45, schrieb Jonathan Tripathy:
 > > > >             
 > > > > > Hi Michael,
 > > > > >
 > > > > > Thanks for your email.
 > > > > >
 > > > > > This is just an idea that I have floating around in my head that
 > > > > > maybe I'd like to rent out some VPSs to customers, just to utilise my
 > > > > > machine which will be sitting in a co-lo nearly idle.
 > > > > >
 > > > > > I'd give out VPSs with 256MB RAM and probably 5Mbps connection speed.
 > > > > >
 > > > > > So the answer is, I don't know what will be running on them, however
 > > > > > I could write up an "acceptable use policy", as well as use some
 > > > > > throttling/scheduling?
 > > > > >
 > > > > > Thanks
 > > > > >
 > > > > > On 06/06/10 19:39, Michael Schmidt wrote:
 > > > > >                 
 > > > > > > Hi Jonathan,
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > the question is, what a kind of VM?
 > > > > > > You can over-utilize a much greater machine with one VM.
 > > > > > > Or on the other side, you can run 40 VMs on a shorter machine.
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > Each ressource can be a bottleneck
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > - Memory - this is realy easy to calculate: Avaiable minus 768MB
 > > > > > > (Reserved for Dom0 should be enugh in this case).
 > > > > > > - CPU - Here we need a VM statistic
 > > > > > > - Disk Bandwidth - Here we need a VM statistic, but in the most
 > > > > > > cases not the bottleneck
 > > > > > > - Disk IOPS - Here we need a VM statistic, in the most cases the
 > > > > > > botelneck
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > What a kind of VMs you plane to run?
 > > > > > > Webservers / mailservers / database-servers ...?
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > Best Regards
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > Michael Schmidt
 > > > > > >
 > > > > > > Am 06.06.10 00:54, schrieb Jonathan Tripathy:
 > > > > > >                     
 > > > > > > > Hi Everyone,
 > > > > > > >
 > > > > > > > I have a Dell R210 server which has a Xeon X3430 Quad Core CPU
 > > > > > > > (2.4Ghz x 4) with 8GB of RAM. I intend to use the H200 controller
 > > > > > > > in a RAID1 setup
 > > > > > > >
 > > > > > > > How many VMs do you think I'd be able to run on this machine? Is 20
 > > > > > > > pushing it?
 > > > > > > >
 > > > > > > > I'd say most (if not all) guests would be in PV mode.
 > > > > > > >
 > > > > > > > Thanks
 > > > > > > >
 > > > > > > > _______________________________________________
 > > > > > > > Xen-users mailing list
 > > > > > > > Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 > > > > > > > http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
 > > > > > > >                         
 > > > > > _______________________________________________
 > > > > > Xen-users mailing list
 > > > > > Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 > > > > > http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
 > > > > >                 
 > > > _______________________________________________
 > > > Xen-users mailing list
 > > > Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 > > > http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
 > > >
 > > >         
 
  
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