VMware RDMs in Virtual compatibility mode
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VMware RDMs in Physical compatibility mode
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advanced file locking for data protection
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No
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Take Snapshots and snapshot based back up is possible
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No
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Behaves exactly like a virtual disk & Guest OS sees it as a virtual disk and the real characteristics are hidden.
RDM behaves as a virtual disk
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Allows the Guest OS to access the hardware directly.
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Luns with size limit of 2tb for RDMs
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Luns of size greater than 2tb are supported
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A disk device backed by a virtual compatibility mode raw disk mapping can use disk modes.
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A disk device backed by a physical compatibility mode raw disk mapping cannot use disk modes, and commands are passed straight through to the LUN indicated by the raw disk mapping.
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Doesn’t support MSCS (Microsoft clustering services)
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Supports MSCS (Microsoft clustering services
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For virtual compatibility mode RDMs, you can migrate the mapping file or convert to thick-provisioned or thin-provisioned disks during migration as long as the destination is not an NFS datastore. If you convert the mapping file, a new virtual disk is created and the contents of the mapped LUN are copied to this disk
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For physical compatibility mode RDMs, you can migrate the mapping file only.
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Bad for SAN aware applications.
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Best for SAN aware applications.
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Cloning is possible
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No
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Create templates of the VM with RDMs in virtual compatibility mode.
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No
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During migration you can either migrate the mapping file or copy the contents of the RDM lun into a virtual disk.
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Can’t migrate if the migration involves the copying of the disk
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No
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Scsi Target based softwares & SAN Management agents
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No
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Physical server to Virtual Machine Clustering
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Wednesday, June 13, 2012
VMware RDMs in Physical Vs Virtual compatibility mode
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