I'm curious what does the "int32" value from "HAFailoverLevel" represent?
From Cluster , it states HAFailoverLevel is a 32bit integer
HAFailoverLevel | Int32 |
From vSphere 6.0 Documentation Center , i got more info
HAFailoverLevel | Int32 | Specifies a configured failover level. This is the number of physical host failures that can be tolerated without impacting the ability to meet minimum thresholds for all running virtual machines. The valid values range from 1 to 4. |
I know if I have no failover hosts designated, the value is 0
PS C:\Users\morgany\Downloads> get-cluster | select Name,HAEnabled,HAAdmissionControlEnabled,HAFailoverLevel,HARestartPriority,HAIsolationResponse
Name : test-demo
HAEnabled : True
HAAdmissionControlEnabled : True
HAFailoverLevel : 0
HARestartPriority : Disabled
HAIsolationResponse : DoNothing
Does this represent 4 instances of host failures OR something else? I don't see this being clearly represented in the web-client UI. Also, why 1 to 4 ?
Message was edited by: Morgan Yang
Hi, This is the value of the number of host failures that the cluster can tolerate.
If you use percentage of resources that the cluter can tolerate, then your querie will result in a HAFailoverLevel result of 0
As for why it can only be 1-4, i'm not sure.
As the below screenshot shows, you can specify this in the HA settings in the web GUI;
Hi, This is the value of the number of host failures that the cluster can tolerate.
If you use percentage of resources that the cluter can tolerate, then your querie will result in a HAFailoverLevel result of 0
As for why it can only be 1-4, i'm not sure.
As the below screenshot shows, you can specify this in the HA settings in the web GUI;