Building on what Francis said, the simplest and best strategy is to start with one and if you truly need the granularity, then break down your SVMs to workload specific tasks - simple file sharing has an SVM, maybe you have one for VMware NFS, perhaps one subset for HR or Legal departments, etc. Think of your corporate entities in a multi-tenant model and it begins to reveal its strengths -- even to the point of delegation of administration of specific SVMs if you have a subset of users that you can trust with a resource pool.
On Apr 23, 2015, at 9:28 AM, Francis Kim <fkim@BERKCOM.commailto:fkim@BERKCOM.com> wrote:
To keep SVM management complexity down to a minimum, start with one data SVM for the entire cluster first, then add SVMs to accommodate workload/management separation.
Aside from the location of the SVM’s root volume, there is no direct relationship between an SVM an a particular node. The relationship between an SVM and a particular node is determined by what node/port the SVM’s LIF lives on (NAS or SAN) and what node has the aggregate that contains the volume the SVM is serving out. For example, if an SVM has its root volume on an aggregate in node1 but all its data volumes and LIFs are on node2, then node2 is doing the great majority of work. Yes, the SVM’s root_volume is on an aggregate on node1, but the processing that takes place on the root_volume is limited to namespace traversal, therefore minimal. You might even say that in this case the SVM is “tied” to node2, since it’s node2 that’s doing all the heavy lifting. NetApp SEs, especially during the early days of CDOT adoption, have been known to spread this idea of creating an SVM for each node in the cluster, which is not really correct.
Think of SVM as a container of resources that ought to be managed as a unit. If you want to delegate the management of such units of management, then an SVM is a convenient construct. Secure multitenancy is a very good use case for multiple SVMs. I’ve seen customers spin up SVMs to isolate workloads such as virtualization, NAS file serving, and Exchange databases. I’ve also seen customers create separate SVMs in anticipation of NetApp developing SVM level DR capability in the future, similar to 7-mode’s vfiler dr.
Francis Kim | Engineer 510-644-1599 x334 | fkim@berkcom.commailto:fkim@berkcom.com
BerkCom | www.berkcom.comhttp://www.berkcom.com/ NetApp | Cisco | Supermicro | Brocade | VMware
On Apr 23, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Momonth <momonth@gmail.commailto:momonth@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
We are (finally) getting close to go live with cDOT clusters. I know some of you guys are already "happy customers" and I would like to hear your thoughts on the following:
1. SAN: Create one SVM per physical node? Or multiple SVMs per node and then combine LUNs, that belong to a certain application, on a single SVM?
2. NAS: pretty much the same questions, pros and cons of having multiple SVMs. What are your criteria when you decide to spin up a new SVM?
SVM conception seems to give quite some flexibility, but I can't get my head around as to when / how to apply this flexibility. I've never used vfilers in 7-Mode world.
Cheers, Vladimir _______________________________________________ Toasters mailing list Toasters@teaparty.netmailto:Toasters@teaparty.net http://www.teaparty.net/mailman/listinfo/toasters
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