VMware
Certain Verba server roles run real-time media applications, and as such requires low-latency access to resources to perform according to specification and to sizing guidelines. This document provides an overview of the recommendations for provisioning the servers in a VMware environment. Failure to follow the configuration recommendations provided can result in the loss of recording, application functionality, and data loss.
Version support
Supported virtualization environments for the server-side are listed.
- VMware ESXi 6.x/7.x
Recommendations
The following table lists the recommendations for VMware deployments for the specific server roles:
Recommendation | Applicable Server Roles | |
---|---|---|
Memory | Set 100% memory reservation. Reserving physical RAMÂ on the VMÂ guest prevents memory ballooning from occurring. If memory ballooning does occur, due to insufficient physical RAM, delays and recording loss can occur due to memory swapping. | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server |
Set with the appropriate size in GBs (according to server role) | All | |
CPU | Reserve 100% of the CPU, which guarantees exclusive pCPU access, which in turn helps to reduce vCPU halt/wake-up cost | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server |
Do not over-provision pCPUs, because it can lead to performance impacts because of additional sharing of last-level cache (LLC) and reduces the performance of latency-sensitive VMs that use virtual NICs (vNICs) for network I/O | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server | |
Configure the appropriate number of vCPUs (defined in the sizing guide according to server role)Â | All | |
The physical host must have extra processing available for scheduling, network handling, device interrupt handling, and other related tasks. To prevent any loss of recording, do not over-commit the CPUs on a host. The equivalent of one physical CPU core must be available to handle these tasks. | All | |
Disk | Disk subsystem should be correctly sized based on the required capacity and performance | Recording Server |
Network | Enable promiscuous mode on the virtual interface when network port mirroring (passive) recording is used | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server |
The VMXNET3 driver should be used for any NICs that are being used for recording unless the NIC is configured as a pass-through mechanism (such as SR-IOV) to bypass the network virtualization layer, in which case the native driver is required. Enable Receive Side Scaling (RSS) for high-performance network settings. Network driver configuration settings:
| Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server | |
Recorder servers perform real-time processing, making them latency-sensitive. VMware recommends the use of its latency-sensitivity features in such an environment to virtualize the Recorder and associated applications:
| Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server | |
Other | Install the VMWare Tools application on the VM guest machines | All |
Make all power management unavailable in both the Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) and vSphere. | All | |
Do not use snapshotting in business hours, because snapshotting causes the VMÂ host to pause execution on virtual machines. Sometimes, all virtual machines on the host are paused. Use of snapshotting during business hours can result in recording loss. | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server | |
Do not use High Availability (HA), vMotion, and Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS) in business hours, because these features cause the VMÂ host to pause execution on virtual machines. Sometimes, all virtual machines on the host are paused. Use of these features can result in recording loss. | Recording Server Media Collector and Proxy Server Announcement Server |
If the required CPUÂ and memory resources are not available for the VMs, problems will manifest during high-stress periods. During high-stress periods, use of system resources in real-time rapidly increases. Reserving the required resources ensures the integrity of the system and its performance at the stated level in all conditions. When reservations are not set correctly, the following problems can occur:
- Excessive packet drops can lead to data loss
- Shared memory and memory ballooning can cause recording loss because memory is used by other virtual machines and is not instantly available
- Shared CPUs can cause recording and packet loss when sudden surges of network activity require more processing power
- Incorrectly sized disk subsystems cause recording loss when shared by multiple applications.
Additional information
The following documents from VMware discuss how to virtualize latency-sensitive applications:
- http://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/techpaper/VMW-Tuning-Latency-Sensitive-Workloads.pdfÂ
- http://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/techpaper/latency-sensitive-perf-vsphere55.pdf
- https://www.vmware.com/content/dam/digitalmarketing/vmware/en/pdf/techpaper/performance/vsphere-esxi-vcenter-server-67-performance-best-practices.pdf