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© 2009 VMware Inc. All rights reserved Cloud Infrastructure vSphere Licensing Overview Alberto Farronato, Senior Prod. Marketing Manager, vSphere August 2011
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2 vSphere vCloud Director vShield Security vCenter Management On July 12 2011 VMware is Introducing a Major Upgrade of the Entire Cloud Infrastructure Stack vCloud Director 1.5 vShield 5 vCenter SRM 5 vSphere 5 vSphere Storage Appliance 1.0 vSphere 5 vSphere Storage Appliance 1.0 Cloud Infrastructure Launch (vSphere, vCenter, vShield, vCloud Director) New
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3 What we Announced on July 12: The New vSphere 5 Licensing vSphere 4.xvSphere 5 Licensing UnitProcessor= Core per procRestricted<Unlimited Physical RAM per host Restricted<Unlimited Pooled vRAM entitlement NA≠ Amt of vRAM pooled across entire environment ! vSphere editionvRAM entitlement Enterprise+48 GB Enterprise32 GB Standard24 GB Essentials+24 GB Essentials24 GB
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4 We listened to customers and partners…
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5 Summary of Customer and Partner Feedback The new licensing model based on pooled vRAM… 1. Affects only a small percentage of customers today, but customers are concerned about their future- looking business cases that have been based on future hardware capabilities and the previous vSphere 4 licensing model. 2. Introduces additional hesitation for virtualizing business critical apps 3. Penalizes short lived usage “spikes” in dev & test and other transient VM scenarios 4. Makes vSphere for VDI expensive
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6 Changes to the vSphere 5 Licensing Model 1. Affects only a small percentage of customers today, but customers are concerned about their future- looking business cases that have been based on future hardware capabilities and the previous vSphere 4 licensing model. Substantially raise the vRAM entitlements per vSphere edition from 48/32/24/24/24 GB to 96/64/32/32/32 GB. 2. Introduces additional hesitation for virtualizing business critical apps Cap the amount of vRAM counted per VM at 96GB* 3. Penalizes short lived usage “spikes” in dev & test and other transient VM scenarios Calculate a 12 month average of configured vRAM rather than a high water mark 4. Makes vSphere for VDI expensiveAlready addressed with vSphere Desktop edition licensed per user *Note: this change will NOT be reflected in the native vSphere 5 vRAM reporting capability at GA time; it will be included in a future vSphere 5 update release. Before this update release, customers will be able to use a stand-alone free utility for tracking vRAM usage that will reflect this change
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7 vRAM Entitlements vSphere edition Previously announced vRAM entitlements New vRAM entitlements vSphere Enterprise+48 GB96 GB vSphere Enterprise32 GB64 GB vSphere Standard24 GB32 GB vSphere Essentials+24 GB32 GB vSphere Essentials24 GB32 GB Free vSphere Hypervisor8 GB32 GB* * Note: this limit is GB of physical RAM per physical server
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8 No VM Requires More than 1 vSphere Enterprise Plus License
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9 Calculate vRAM based on 12 month average vs high water mark High water mark Average Calculating a 12-month average of vRAM configured to all powered-on VMs allows for short lived “spikes”
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10 Desktop Virtualization with vSphere 5 vSphere Desktop - NEW edition for VDI deployments Can only be used for desktop virtualization New purchases only Licensed on a total number of Powered On desktop virtual machines Sold in pack size of 100 at a list price of $6,500 USD Unlimited vRAM entitlements All features and functionalities of vSphere Enterprise Plus Existing VDI Customers vSphere licenses with active SnS and used for VDI may be upgraded to corresponding vSphere 5.0 edition and have unlimited vRAM entitlement Must be managed by different instance of vCenter Server VMware View Comprehensive end to end Desktop Virtualization Solution Available as View Enterprise and View Premier
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11 vSphere 5 Licensing Detail
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12 Updated 8/3/11 - vSphere 5.0 Licensing Model in More Detail
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13 What is vRAM? vRAM is the memory configured to a virtual machine Assigning a certain amount of vRAM is a required step in the creation of a virtual machine
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14 Key vRAM Concepts Pooled vRAM Entitlement Each vSphere 5 processor license comes with certain amount of vRAM entitlement Sum of all processor license entitlements Consumed vRAM Sum of vRAM configured into all powered on VMs 1 2 3 Compliance = 12 month rolling average of Consumed vRAM < Pooled vRAM Entitlement 4
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15 Key concepts - Example Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B 32GB vRAM Pool (256GB) Consumed vRAM = 80 GB 4 licenses of vSphere Enterprise Edition provide a vRAM pool of 256GB (4 * 64 GB) Customer creates 20 VMs with 4GB vRAM each Each vSphere Enterprise Edition license entitles to 64GB of vRAM. Compliance = 12 month rolling average of Consumed vRAM < Pooled vRAM Entitlement
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16 vRAM Pool (using 80 GB out of 128 GB) vSphere 5 Licensing In Action Each CPU must have at least one vSphere license assigned Cores and physical RAM do not matter Each processor license managed by a vCenter or multiple vCenters in Linked mode contributes an amount of vRAM capacity to the total vRAM pool Example: 4 vSphere Ent. Licenses create a vRAM pool of 256GB of vRAM (4 x 64GB) Each vSphere Edition creates a separate pool that must be kept in licensing compliance vRAM pool is shared among powered-on VMs running on all hosts in a vCenter Example: 20 VMs with 4GB of configured vRAM consume a total of 80GB vRAM It doesn’t matter how many VMs you run and on which hosts you run them. vMotion, DRS, HA do not require additional licenses At any point in time the 12 month rolling average of daily high watermark of consumed vRAM must be equal or less to the vRAM pool capacity Compliance is at the vCenter level not the host level vRAM pool can be extended by: Upgrading all CPUs to higher end vSphere Edition Adding processor licenses to the same set of CPUs Adding a new host with new licenses VM (4GB vRAM) 1 Processor License Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VMware vCenter Server vSphere 5.0 How does it work?
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17 Tools for Tracking vRAM Entitlement vs Usage Before upgrading to vSphere 5, customers can use a separate free utility that analyzes a VI3 or vSphere 4 environment, and determines vRAM consumed The tool will be available later in Q3 2011 After upgrading to vSphere 5: 1. vRAM licensing monitoring and reporting tool built into vCenter 5 2. Free add-on to vCenter for in-depth historical trending analysis
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18 When Does the vSphere 5 Licensing Model Apply? For ELA customers Customers with active ELA will continue to be subject to the terms of their contracts for the duration of their contract, independent of which vSphere version they deployed ELA customers may contact their VMware sales representatives to update the terms of their ELAs to the new vSphere 5 licensing model For customers without ELAs The new model applies only to vSphere 5 licenses. Prior versions of vSphere will continue to be based on their respective licensing model The new vSphere 5 licensing model will apply upon acceptance of the vSphere 5 EULA (necessary condition to upgrade to vSphere 5) Customers who purchase vSphere 5 licenses and decide to downgrade to older versions of vSphere will be subject to the EULA terms and licensing model of the vSphere version they downgrade to
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19 All editions include: Thin Provisioning, Update Manager, Storage APIs for Data Protection, Image Profile, and SLES (except Ess and Ess +) ` Essentials Essentials Plus StandardEnterprise Enterprise Plus Price per proc (license only) $83$749 $995$2,875$3,495 vRAM Entitlement per proc 32 GB 64 GB96 GB vCPU 8 way 32 way Features Hypervisor High Availability Data Recovery vMotion Virtual Serial Port Concentrator Hot Add vShield Zones Fault Tolerance Storage APIs for Array Integration Storage vMotion Distribute Resource Scheduler & Distributed Power Management Distributed Switch I/O Controls (Network and Storage) Host Profiles Auto deploy Profile-Driven Storage Storage DRS Essentials Essentials Plus Standard AdvancedEnterprise Enterprise Plus New in vSphere 5.0 vSphere Storage Appliance + $7,995 vSphere 5 Editions
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20 ` Essentials Essentials Plus StandardEnterprise Enterprise Plus Price per proc (license only) $495$4,495$10,000$17,495$21,995 Includes 6 CPUs 8 CPUs6 CPUs Entitlements per CPU license vRAM Entitlement 32 GB (192 GB max) 32 GB (256GB per kit) 64 GB (384 per kit) 96 GB (576 per kit) vCPU 8 way 32 way Features Hypervisor High Availability Data Recovery vMotion Virtual Serial Port Concentrator Hot Add vShield Zones Fault Tolerance Storage APIs for Array Integration Storage vMotion Distribute Resource Scheduler & Distributed Power Management Distributed Switch I/O Controls (Network and Storage) Host Profiles Auto deploy Profile-Driven Storage Storage DRS All editions include: Thin Provisioning, Update Manager, Storage APIs for Data Protection, Image Profile, and SLES (except Ess and Ess +) Essentials Essentials Plus Standard AK Enterprise AK Enterprise Plus AK New in vSphere 5.0 vSphere 5 Acceleration Kits
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21 VMware vSphere Hypervisor 5 Full-featured hypervisor Based on VMware’s next generation hypervisor architecture, ESXi Provides the same performance, reliability and robustness of the ESXi included with paid versions of VMware vSphere Basic virtualization capabilities for a single host Cannot be centrally managed with vCenter Server Individual vSphere Hypervisor hosts can be remotely managed with the vSphere Client Provides only basic server consolidation capabilities Free Entitles to 32GB of vRAM per server and can be used on servers with up to 32GB of physical RAM Can be easily upgraded to paid vSphere editions for central management and advanced capabilities Entry level free product for single server virtualization
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22 Entitlement Paths for current vSphere 4.x customers vSphere 4.x vSphere 5.0 Enterprise Plus Enterprise Advanced Standard Essentials Plus Essentials Enterprise Plus Enterprise Standard Essentials Plus Essentials
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23 vSphere Desktop Pricing and Packaging
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24 vSphere Desktop Pricing and licensing Licensed on a total number of Powered On desktop virtual machines Available in pack size of 100 at a license list price of $6,500 USD Included with View end to end Bundles Eligibility All commercial, academic and government customers SKUs: VS5-DT100VM-C, VS5-DT100VM-A, VS5-DT100VM-F Restrictions For hosting desktop virtualization ONLY New purchases only For server virtualization vSphere Ess, Ess+, Standard, Enterprise, Enterprise + vSphere Desktop For desktop virtualization only
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25 Updates to View 4 Add-on and Bundles Pricing View Enterprise Bundle View Enterprise Add-on* View Premier Bundle View Premier Add-on* View Premier Upgrade vSphere for Desktop vCenter Server Standard for Desktop View Manager View Composer Local Mode vShield Endpoint ThinApp (Client + Packager) Pricing (per concurrent connection) $150 (no change) $90 $250 (no change) $190 $100 (no change) * vSphere 5 licenses purchased separately to run View Enterprise Add-on and View Premier Add-on will be subject to the per processor pooled vRAM entitlement licensing
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26 Resources Partner Central vSphere Page http://www.vmware.com/go/partnercentral/vsphere http://www.vmware.com/go/partnercentral/vsphere vSphere 5 Pricing and Packaging Whitepaper vSphere 5 Pricing and Packaging FAQ vSphere 5 Licensing Cheat Sheet vSphere 5 Licensing Simulator And more… vSphere Upgrade Center http://www.vmware.com/products/vsphere/upgrade- center/overview.html http://www.vmware.com/products/vsphere/upgrade- center/overview.html Technical Whitepapers Migration Checklists And more….
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27 Thanks!
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28 vSphere 5.0 Licensing - Detailed Examples
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29 Customer Scenario How do I license a host with vSphere 5? How much vRAM do I get with my vSphere 5 licenses? What is the vRAM pool? How many VMs can I run with my vRAM pool? How many VMs can I power on a host? What if my VMs move to a different host with vMotion or DRS? What is my vRAM pool if I have multiple vCenter Servers? What is my vRAM pool if I have more than one vSphere edition? How do I expand my vRAM pool? How do I license an new host and join it to my vRAM pool? What are the benefits of the vSphere 5 licensing model? Will vSphere 5 be more expensive for vSphere 4.x customers?
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30 How Many vSphere Licenses Do I Need? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License In this example: Licensing Host A with vSphere 5 requires the same number of licenses as with vSphere 4.x Licensing Host B with vSphere 5 requires half the licenses of vSphere 4.x (2 vs. 4) because vSphere 5 does not limit the number of cores per processor In this example: Licensing Host A with vSphere 5 requires the same number of licenses as with vSphere 4.x Licensing Host B with vSphere 5 requires half the licenses of vSphere 4.x (2 vs. 4) because vSphere 5 does not limit the number of cores per processor Answer Example Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM Like in vSphere 4.x, each CPU requires at least one license vSphere 5 licensing does not impose limits on number of cores per processor and physical RAM per server Summary Hosts2 CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4
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31 How Much vRAM Do I Get with My vSphere Licenses? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Answer Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM 64GB Each vSphere Enterprise Edition license entitles to 64GB of vRAM. Each vSphere 5 processor license includes a vRAM entitlement EditionvRam per License Enterprise Plus96GB Enterprise64GB Standard32GB Essentials Plus 32GB (192GB max) Essentials 32GB (192GB max)
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32 What is the vRAM pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example When managing vSphere hosts with vCenter, vRAM entitlements are pooled vRAM pool capacity is the max capacity that can be used with the current set of licenses License the following servers with vSphere Enterprise Edition: Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 4 licenses of vSphere Enterprise Edition provide a vRAM pool of 256GB (4 * 64 GB) 64GB vRAM Pool (256GB)
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33 How Many VMs Can I Run with My vRAM pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example You can run as many VMs as you want as long as the consumed vRAM capacity is equal or less than the vRAM pool Only powered on VMs consume vRAM capacity Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRAM (GB)96 User creates 32 VMs with 4GB of configured vRAM and powers on only 24 24 powered on VMs each with 4GB of configured vRAM consume a total of 96GB Powered off VMs do not consume vRAM capacity 24 powered on VMs each with 4GB of configured vRAM consume a total of 96GB Powered off VMs do not consume vRAM capacity
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34 How Many VMs Can I Power-on a Host? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example You can power on as many VMs as you as you want on a host as long as the total consumed vRAM is less or equal to available vRAM pool If necessary, you can increase the available vRAM pool capacity by adding more proc. licenses to a CPU Summary ABPool vSphere Lic.224 VMs43640 Consumed vRAM (GB)16144160 vRam Pool (GB)128 256 User deploys 40 VMs each with 4GB of configured vRAM distributing 4 VMs on Host A and 36 on Host B By running 36VMs on host B the user consumes a total of 144GB on Host B The two Enterprise Ed. Licenses used for Host B contributes a total of 128GB of vRAM to the pool By running 36VMs on host B the user consumes a total of 144GB on Host B The two Enterprise Ed. Licenses used for Host B contributes a total of 128GB of vRAM to the pool … …
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35 What if My VMs Move to a Different Host with vMotion or DRS? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example Any VM can run on any host within a vRAM pool. Since vRAM is pooled across all hosts of the same vSphere edition under a vCenter Server, the movement of VMs cannot cause more vRAM to be needed. Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRam (GB)128 VMs on one host can vMotion to another without impacting the consumed or available vRAM capacity. All VMs can even run on a single host, in effect borrowing the vRAM capacity of the other host.
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36 What is My vRAM Pool if I Have Multiple vCenter Servers? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example The vRAM pool can extend across multiple linked vCenter Servers. vCenter Servers (Standard Edition) can be linked together using Linked Mode. Site 1 and Site 2 each contain a host with two licenses of Enterprise. Each site has 128GB of pooled vRAM capacity in a separate pool. When the vCenter Servers at each site are linked together, one vRAM pool is created with 256 GB of pooled vRAM capacity. VMware vCenter Server Site 1Site 2 Summary Site 1Site 2 CPUs22 vSphere Licenses22 Pooled vRAM (GB)128 Consumed vRam (GB)64 Summary Site 1 and 2 CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRam (GB)128 You must link the vCenter Servers to form a single vRAM pool. The resulting vRAM capacity is the sum of the two site’s vRAM capacity.
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37 What is My vRAM Pool if I Have More Than One vSphere Edition? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example Each edition of vSphere has a separate vRAM pool. Adding licenses for one edition will not add vRAM to other edition’s vRAM pool. Host X is licensed with two licenses of Enterprise Plus. There are two separate vRAM pools: one for Enterprise with 256 GB, another for Enterprise Plus with 192 GB. Summary EntEnt+ CPUs42 vSphere Licenses42 Pooled vRAM (GB)256192 Consumed vRam (GB)12896 Host X 11 vSphere Ent + CPU
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38 I Need More vRAM Capacity. How Do I Expand my vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example There are two ways you can expand your vRAM pool: 1)Upgrade all licenses to an edition with a higher vRAM entitlement 2)Add more licenses of the current edition Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRam (GB)256 All 256GB of vRAM capacity is consumed. Another 16 GB is needed for 4 additional VMs. … … … …
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39 Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRam (GB)256 Example I Need More vRAM Capacity. How Do I Expand my vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer There are two ways you can expand your vRAM pool: 1)Upgrade all licenses to an edition with a higher vRAM entitlement 2)Add more licenses of the current edition vSphere Ent + Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)384 Consumed vRam (GB)272 All 256GB of vRAM capacity is consumed. Another 16 GB is needed for 4 additional VMs. Upgrading all 4 licenses to Enterprise Plus would raise the Pooled vRAM capacity to 384GB. Enterprise Plus is entitled to 96GB of vRAM. 4 licenses * 96GB = 384GB vRAM Enterprise Plus is entitled to 96GB of vRAM. 4 licenses * 96GB = 384GB vRAM … … … …
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40 Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses4 Pooled vRAM (GB)256 Consumed vRam (GB)256 Example All 256GB of vRAM capacity is consumed. Another 16 GB is needed for 4 additional VMs. Adding one additional license of Enterprise would increase the pooled vRAM capacity to 320GB. I Need More vRAM Capacity. How Do I Expand my vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer There are two ways you can expand your vRAM pool: 1)Upgrade all licenses to an edition with a higher vRAM entitlement 2)Add more licenses of the current edition 1 Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses5 Pooled vRAM (GB)320 Consumed vRam (GB)272 One additional license of Enterprise will increase the vRAM pool by 64GB, yielding a total pooled vRAM capacity of 320GB. … … … …
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41 How Do I License a New Host and Join It to My vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example A new host, Host C, needs to be licensed. Host C CPU There are two ways to add a host: 1)Add additional licenses of the same edition. 2)If you have more licenses than CPUs, you can deploy those licenses to the new host. Pooled vRAM capacity will remain unchanged. Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses5 Pooled vRAM (GB)320 Consumed vRam (GB)144 1
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42 Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses5 Pooled vRAM (GB)320 Consumed vRam (GB)144 vSphere Ent How Do I License a New Host and Join It to My vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example A new host, Host C, needs to be licensed. One additional license of Enterprise is added. This increases the pooled vRAM capacity to 384GB. Host C CPU There are two ways to add a host: 1)Add additional licenses of the same edition 2)If you have more licenses than CPUs, you can deploy those licenses to the new host. Pooled vRAM capacity will remain unchanged. 1 1 VMware vCenter Server Summary CPUs5 vSphere Licenses6 Pooled vRAM (GB)384 Consumed vRam (GB)144 Pooled vRAM capacity is increased by 64GB. As before, VMs can run on any of the three hosts.
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43 Summary CPUs4 vSphere Licenses5 Pooled vRAM (GB)320 Consumed vRam (GB)144 How Do I License a New Host and Join It to My vRAM Pool? Host A 11 vSphere Ent 11 CPU Host B VM (4GB vRAM) Powered-off VM 1 Processor License Host A 2 sockets, 4 cores per CPU, 48GB RAM Host B 2 sockets, 12 cores per CPU, 64GB RAM VMware vCenter Server Answer Example Host C CPU There are two ways to add a host: 1)Add additional licenses of the same edition. 2)If you have more licenses than CPUs, you can deploy those licenses to the new host. Pooled vRAM capacity will remain unchanged. 1 A new host, Host C, needs to be licensed. No additional vRAM is needed and there are more licenses than CPUs. A license can be redeployed to Host C. Pooled vRAM capacity remains unchanged. vSphere Ent VMware vCenter Server Summary CPUs5 vSphere Licenses5 Pooled vRAM (GB)320 Consumed vRam (GB)144 Pooled vRAM capacity remains unchanged at 320GB. As before, the VMs can run on any of the three hosts.
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