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    Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM

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    esxi host vmware sql server virtual machine
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    • DashrenderD
      Dashrender @hobbit666
      last edited by

      @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

      Should of mentioned here on the first post we currently run a IPOD. So when I run a DPACK do I run it on just the 3 host servers? Or on the servers and the SAN?
      *Edit was planning on running on over a week time span soon.

      I'm not sure if you can run it inside the hypervisor, but you can definitely run it inside every VM, then you know on a VM by VM basis what that VM is doing.

      DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DustinB3403D
        DustinB3403 @Dashrender
        last edited by

        @dashrender depends on the hypervisor, ESXi is supported, you simply need admin access to the host.

        I wouldn't be surprised if Hyper-V works too.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • ObsolesceO
          Obsolesce @hobbit666
          last edited by Obsolesce

          @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

          @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

          We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

          WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

          • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
            • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
            • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
            • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
            • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

          The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

          The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

          I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

          How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

          I'm not sure what you're asking.

          But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

          • HOST
            • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
              • SSDs
            • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
              • HDDs

          These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

          hobbit666H DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • black3dynamiteB
            black3dynamite @DustinB3403
            last edited by

            @dustinb3403 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

            @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

            @dustinb3403 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

            @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

            @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

            So what the OP needs to do is get IOPs requirements of his environment, and build toward that.

            This is where I hold my hands up. I have no idea when to measure this, as in what we use now, and how to calculate what we need and for future.

            Just run a Dell DPACK scan for 3 or 4 days against your servers. You don't want to measure something at just one specific time as you wouldn't get a real view of the results.

            The longer the better. For example, some companies have a process that only runs monthly, so if you're not running DPACK at that time, you could miss a high load time.

            This is true of course. I was just saying as a base to get an idea of what he uses.

            I ran a dpack for a week and our IOPS are insanely low here.

            To prepare for an hardware upgrade, does one run DPACK on the VMs, the Hypervisor or both?

            DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DustinB3403D
              DustinB3403 @black3dynamite
              last edited by

              @black3dynamite said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              @dustinb3403 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              @dustinb3403 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

              So what the OP needs to do is get IOPs requirements of his environment, and build toward that.

              This is where I hold my hands up. I have no idea when to measure this, as in what we use now, and how to calculate what we need and for future.

              Just run a Dell DPACK scan for 3 or 4 days against your servers. You don't want to measure something at just one specific time as you wouldn't get a real view of the results.

              The longer the better. For example, some companies have a process that only runs monthly, so if you're not running DPACK at that time, you could miss a high load time.

              This is true of course. I was just saying as a base to get an idea of what he uses.

              I ran a dpack for a week and our IOPS are insanely low here.

              To prepare for an hardware upgrade, does one run DPACK on the VMs, the Hypervisor or both?

              I ran on the hypervisor, I didn't need to go so granular and look a the VM's (now sql or heavy systems on premise).

              This is entirely up to you though.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • hobbit666H
                hobbit666 @Obsolesce
                last edited by

                @tim_g more how many disk in each RAID.

                ObsolesceO DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ObsolesceO
                  Obsolesce @hobbit666
                  last edited by

                  @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                  @tim_g more how many disk in each RAID.

                  10 SSDs
                  6 HDDs

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • hobbit666H
                    hobbit666
                    last edited by

                    Right Monday I'll setup a DPACK and run it for a week. See what I get from that.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @Obsolesce
                      last edited by Dashrender

                      @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                      @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                      @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                      We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                      WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                      • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                        • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                        • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                        • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                        • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                      The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                      The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                      I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                      How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                      I'm not sure what you're asking.

                      But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                      • HOST
                        • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                          • SSDs
                        • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                          • HDDs

                      These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                      What is your C : Drive?

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                        @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                        @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                        @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                        We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                        WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                        • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                          • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                          • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                          • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                          • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                        The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                        The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                        I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                        How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                        I'm not sure what you're asking.

                        But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                        • HOST
                          • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                            • SSDs
                          • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                            • HDDs

                        These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                        What is your 😄 Drive?

                        The smile drive is where you store the memes.

                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DashrenderD
                          Dashrender @hobbit666
                          last edited by

                          @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                          @tim_g more how many disk in each RAID.

                          Again, this is completely situation based.

                          I see Tim answered for his setup, but it will have zero relation to your needs.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                            @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                            @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                            @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                            @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                            We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                            WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                            • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                              • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                              • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                              • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                              • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                            The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                            The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                            I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                            How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                            I'm not sure what you're asking.

                            But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                            • HOST
                              • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                                • SSDs
                              • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                                • HDDs

                            These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                            What is your 😄 Drive?

                            The smile drive is where you store the memes.

                            /sigh - it displace the letter c followed by colon as 😄
                            again /sigh.

                            black3dynamiteB scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • black3dynamiteB
                              black3dynamite @Dashrender
                              last edited by

                              @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                              We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                              WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                              • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                                • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                                • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                                • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                                • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                              The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                              The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                              I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                              How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                              I'm not sure what you're asking.

                              But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                              • HOST
                                • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                                  • SSDs
                                • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                                  • HDDs

                              These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                              What is your 😄 Drive?

                              The smile drive is where you store the memes.

                              /sigh - it displace the letter c followed by colon as 😄
                              again /sigh.

                              I got caught with that too. I need to remember to use C:\ instead.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                last edited by

                                @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                                WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                                • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                                  • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                                  • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                                  • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                                  • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                                The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                                The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                                I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                                How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                                I'm not sure what you're asking.

                                But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                                • HOST
                                  • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                                    • SSDs
                                  • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                                    • HDDs

                                These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                                What is your 😄 Drive?

                                The smile drive is where you store the memes.

                                /sigh - it displace the letter c followed by colon as 😄
                                again /sigh.

                                Just don't displace your colon!

                                ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • ObsolesceO
                                  Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @dashrender said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  @tim_g said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                  We have a Hyper-V host with two tiers of storage: an all SSD RAID, and an all HDD RAID.

                                  WHen I set up the MS SQL server (mainly for MS Dynamics purposes, but it also serves some other critical business functions), I had to do it according to what the Dynamics consultant suggested:

                                  • MS SQL VM: (virtual disk (os drive letter))
                                    • serv-SQL.vhdx (C:)
                                    • serv-SQL-DATA.vhdx (D:)
                                    • serv-SQL-LOG.vhdx (E:)
                                    • serv-SQL-BACKUP.vhdx (F:)

                                  The D and E virtual disks are located on the SSD RAID on the physical host, the other two are on the HDD RAID.

                                  The stuff needing to be fast like the TempDB, Log, main DB, etc is all on SSD... while the backups and the OS are on the HDD RAID.

                                  I do have SSD caching for the HDD RAID, so the other stuff is actually sped up, though not 100% of the time. Most writes are anyways.

                                  How have you got you disks split? Is it 50/50 SSD/Spinning?

                                  I'm not sure what you're asking.

                                  But the physical Hyper-V Host simply has two physical RAIDs.

                                  • HOST
                                    • 1st RAID (which is a RAID10)
                                      • SSDs
                                    • 2nd RAID (also a RAID10)
                                      • HDDs

                                  These RAIDs are completely separate. On the HOST, the SSD RAID is the D: drive, and the HDD RAID is the E: drive. I store the virtual machine virtual disks (the .vhdx disks) on the one it needs to go on depending on IOPS requirements. For example, the database and log virtual disks of MS SQL virtual machines go on the D: drive of the HOST, and the OS and Backup .vhdx virtual disks of that virtual machine go on the E: drive of the HOST.

                                  What is your 😄 Drive?

                                  The smile drive is where you store the memes.

                                  /sigh - it displace the letter c followed by colon as 😄
                                  again /sigh.

                                  Just don't displace your colon!

                                  Keep it clean!

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • hobbit666H
                                    hobbit666
                                    last edited by

                                    Running a 7 day DPACK (now liveoptics)

                                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @hobbit666
                                      last edited by

                                      @hobbit666 said in Sizing a Server and Disks - SQL VM:

                                      Running a 7 day DPACK (now liveoptics)

                                      Have fun, see you next week 🙂

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • hobbit666H
                                        hobbit666
                                        last edited by

                                        Had to stop the DPACK and re-run.

                                        Hopefully results tomorrow afternoon 🙂

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • hobbit666H
                                          hobbit666
                                          last edited by hobbit666

                                          OK so are you ready for Slide show city 🙂 here comes the graphs 🙂

                                          Basic Layout of the 3-2-1
                                          0_1519119149915_Layout-Info.png

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • hobbit666H
                                            hobbit666
                                            last edited by

                                            Page1
                                            0_1519116184121_ExecutiveSummary.png

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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