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1. Re: Manage Two physical datacenters within same instance of vCenter server
IRIX201110141 Feb 10, 2019 11:18 PM (in response to 3dsachin)These are 2 different questions.
Yes a single vCenter instance can manage >= 1000 Hosts and it doesnt matter if these are located in the same room, building, city. So if you have another campus DC there just use a single vCenter to manage both locations.
Now the other part... how to protect vCenter when is comes to be the top asset
- Protect it like other VM to with Replication, Metro Cluster Setups
- or use VCSA HA. vCenter can be deployed in a Active/Passive Setup with 2 Instances and a witness
Regards,
Joerg
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2. Re: Manage Two physical datacenters within same instance of vCenter server
cloudsuresh Feb 11, 2019 11:33 PM (in response to IRIX201110141)Hi,
May i know the complete infrastructure configuration and license details of host and guest. It may improve the quality of solution.
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3. Re: Manage Two physical datacenters within same instance of vCenter server
3dsachin Feb 15, 2019 2:00 AM (in response to cloudsuresh)Two vsphere 6.7 clusters with 4 hosts each. Both 100 m apart with 10g connectivity. Both environments have 100tb san - hp nimble. the aim is to make both Data centres independent and back for each other.
Vcenter standard
vsphere enterprise plus
One way would be to license with verealize operations to balance the workload.
Any thoughts please.
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4. Re: Manage Two physical datacenters within same instance of vCenter server
daphnissov Feb 17, 2019 6:21 AM (in response to 3dsachin)The only way to do this would depend on your Nimble's capabilities for cross-site synchronous replication. What would probably be better, easier, and cheaper with less complexity is to simply use replication at a higher level to replicate VMs from each side to the other. If a site is down, failover to the other site. Once first site is recovered, fail back and continue replication. There are a number of products that can do this, but they usually rely upon two vCenters. In short, what you want has a cost, and it's not something you're going to get for "free" or without spending some money. That's just life.