Hi Expert,
I still confusing between vvol and RDM in vsphere 6.0.
what are the difference between these two? Can they support vMotion?
are there any limitation if we using them?
Thank you in advanced for your sharing idea.
Vivath
Hello,
Vvol:
VVols introduces a storage container as a logical grouping of VMs and VVols. A VVols datastore is now a storage container, no longer represented as a SCSI logical unit (LU) or NFS filesystem. Instead, it’s simply a way of grouping VVols from the VMware administrator’s perspective — while allowing VVols to be independent from a storage perspective.
RDM:
RDM is a mapping file in a separate VMFS volume that acts as a proxy for a raw physical storage device. The RDM allows a virtual machine to directly access and use the storage device. The RDM contains metadata for managing and redirecting disk access to the physical device.
The file gives you some of the advantages of direct access to a physical device while keeping some advantages of a virtual disk in VMFS. As a result, it merges VMFS manageability with raw device access.
RDMs can be described in terms such as mapping a raw device into a datastore, mapping a system LUN, or mapping a disk file to a physical disk volume. All these terms refer to RDMs.
Although VMware recommends that you use VMFS datastores for most virtual disk storage, on certain occasions, you might need to use raw LUNs or logical disks located in a SAN.
For example, you need to use raw LUNs with RDMs in the following situations:
Think of an RDM as a symbolic link from a VMFS volume to a raw LUN. The mapping makes LUNs appear as files in a VMFS volume. The RDM, not the raw LUN, is referenced in the virtual machine configuration. The RDM contains a reference to the raw LUN.
■ | |
■ | |
■ | Use file system features such as distributed file locking, permissions, and naming. |
Two compatibility modes are available for RDMs:
VVol Features in 6.0
vSphere 6.0 New Features - What is VMware Virtual Volumes (VVols)? ..
Traditional Storage and Vvol comparison
Virtual Volumes (VVols) vs Traditional Storage | SolidFire | Blog ...
Hello,
Vvol:
VVols introduces a storage container as a logical grouping of VMs and VVols. A VVols datastore is now a storage container, no longer represented as a SCSI logical unit (LU) or NFS filesystem. Instead, it’s simply a way of grouping VVols from the VMware administrator’s perspective — while allowing VVols to be independent from a storage perspective.
RDM:
RDM is a mapping file in a separate VMFS volume that acts as a proxy for a raw physical storage device. The RDM allows a virtual machine to directly access and use the storage device. The RDM contains metadata for managing and redirecting disk access to the physical device.
The file gives you some of the advantages of direct access to a physical device while keeping some advantages of a virtual disk in VMFS. As a result, it merges VMFS manageability with raw device access.
RDMs can be described in terms such as mapping a raw device into a datastore, mapping a system LUN, or mapping a disk file to a physical disk volume. All these terms refer to RDMs.
Although VMware recommends that you use VMFS datastores for most virtual disk storage, on certain occasions, you might need to use raw LUNs or logical disks located in a SAN.
For example, you need to use raw LUNs with RDMs in the following situations:
Think of an RDM as a symbolic link from a VMFS volume to a raw LUN. The mapping makes LUNs appear as files in a VMFS volume. The RDM, not the raw LUN, is referenced in the virtual machine configuration. The RDM contains a reference to the raw LUN.
■ | |
■ | |
■ | Use file system features such as distributed file locking, permissions, and naming. |
Two compatibility modes are available for RDMs:
VVol Features in 6.0
vSphere 6.0 New Features - What is VMware Virtual Volumes (VVols)? ..
Traditional Storage and Vvol comparison
Virtual Volumes (VVols) vs Traditional Storage | SolidFire | Blog ...
VVol
An integration and management framework delivering a new operational model for external storage (SAN/NAS. It is comprised of a control plane using Storage Policy-Based Management, and a data plane using VASA APIs for external storage and vSphere APIs for IO Filtering for in-hypervisor software data services.
RDM is a mapping file in a separate VMFS volume that acts as a proxy for a raw physical storage device. The RDM allows a virtual machine to directly access and use the storage device. The RDM contains metadata for managing and redirecting disk access to the physical device.
Hope above will help you.