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Storage options for Windows Server 2008's Hyper-V

Jose Barreto's wrote a great article on the Storage Options for Windows Server 2008 and Hyper-V. Its funny as I was talking to my college who was trying to set up a few clustering options for Hyper-V and needed a good guide to work from.

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Windows Server 2008’s Hyper-V has been in public beta for a while now and lots of people have been experimenting with it. One aspect that I am focusing on is storage for those virtualized environments and more specifically the options related to SAN storage.

Virtualization terminology

Before we start, I wanted to define some terms commonly used in virtualization. We refer to the physical computer running the Hyper-V software as host, as opposed to guest, which is the term used for  virtual machine. You can, say, for instance, that the host must support hardware-assisted virtualization or that you can now run a 64-bit OS in the guest.

The other term used with Hyper-V is Integration Components. This is the additional software you run on the guest to better support Hyper-V. Windows Server 2008 already ships with Hyper-V Integration Components, but older operating systems will need to install them separately. In Virtual Server or Virtual PC, these were called “additions”.

Exposing storage to the host

A Hyper-V host is a server running Windows Server 2008 and it will support the many different storage options of that OS. This includes directly-attached storage (SATA, SAS) or SAN storage (FC, iSCSI). Once you expose the disks to the host, you can expose it to the guest in many different ways.

VHD or passthrough disk on the host

As with Virtual Server and Virtual PC, you can create a VHD file in one of the host’s volume and expose that as a virtual hard disk to the guest. This VHD functions simply as a set of blocks, stored as a regular file using the host OS file system (typically NTFS). There are a few different types of VHD, like fixed size or dynamically expanding. This hasn’t changed from previous versions. The maximum size of a VHD continues to be 2040 GB (8 GB short of 2 TB).

You can now expose a host disk to the guest without even putting a volume on it using a passthrough disk. Hyper-V will let you “bypass” the host’s file system and access a disk directly. This raw disk, which is not limited to 2040 GB in size, can be a physical HD on the host or a logical unit on a SAN. To make sure the host and the guest are not trying to use the disk at the same time, Hyper-V requires the disk to be in the offline state on the host. This is referred to as LUN passthrough, if the disk being exposed to the guest is a LUN on a SAN from the host perspective.

IDE or SCSI on the guest

When you configure the guest’s virtual machine settings, you need to choose how to show the host disk (be it VHD file or passthrough disk) to the guest. The guest can see that disk either as a virtual ATA device on a virtual IDE controller or as a virtual SCSI disk device on a virtual SCSI controller. Note that you do not have to expose the device to the guest in the same way it is exposed to the host. For instance, a VHD file on a physical IDE disk on the host can be exposed as a virtual SCSI disk on the guest. A physical SAS disk on the host can be exposed as a virtual IDE disk on the guest.

The main decision criteria here should be the capabilities you are looking for on the guest. You can only have up to 4 virtual IDE disks on the guest (2 controllers with 2 disks each), but they are the only types of disk that the virtualized BIOS will boot from. You can have up to 1020 virtual SCSI disks on the guest (4 controllers with 255 disks each), but you cannot boot from them and you will need an OS with Integration Components. Virtual IDE disks will perform at the same level of the virtual SCSI disks after you load the Integration Components in the OS, since they leverage the same optimizations.

You must use SCSI if you need to expose more than 4 virtual disks to your guest. You must use IDE if your guest needs to boot to that virtual disk or if there are no Integration Components in the guest OS. You can also use both IDE and SCSI with the same guest.

iSCSI directly to guests

One additional option is to expose disks directly to the guest OS (without ever exposing it to the host) by using iSCSI. All you need to do is load an iSCSI initiator in the guest OS (Windows Server 2008 already includes one) and configure your target correctly. Hyper-V’s virtual BIOS does not support booting to iSCSI directly, so you will still need to have at least one disk available to the guest as an IDE disk so you can boot to it. However, all your other disks can be iSCSI LUNs.

Moving disks between hosts

Another common usage scenario in virtualization is moving a virtual machine from one host to another. You will typically shut down the guest (or pause it), move the storage resources and then bring the VM up in the new host (or resume it).

The “move the storage” part is easier to imagine if you are using VHD files for guest disks. You simply copy the files from host to host. If you’re using physical disks (let’s say, SAS drives that are passthrough disks exposed as IDE disks to the guest), you can physically move the disk to another host. If this is a LUN on a SAN, you would need to reconfigure the SAN to mask the LUN to the old host and unmask it to the new host. You might want to use a technology called NPIV to use “virtual” WWNs for a set of LUNs, so you can move them between hosts without the need to reconfigure the SAN itself. This would be the equivalent of using multiple iSCSI targets for the same Hyper-V host and reconfiguring the targets to show up on the other host. If you use iSCSI directly exposed to the guest, those iSCSI data LUNs will just move with the guest, assuming the guest continues to have a network path to the iSCSI target and that you used one of the other methods to move the VM configuration and boot disk.

Windows Server 2008 is also a lot smarter about using LUNs on a SAN, so you might consider exposing LUNs to multiple Hyper-V hosts and onlining the LUNs as required, as long you don't access them simultaneosly from multiple hosts.

Keep in mind that, although I am talking about doing this manually, you will typically automate the process. Windows Server Failver Clustering and System Center Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) can make some of those things happens automatically. In some scenarios, the whole move can happen in just seconds (assuming you are pausing/resuming the VM and the disks are in a SAN). However, there is no option today with a robot to physically move disks from one host to another :-).

A few tables

Since there are lots of different choices and options, I put together a few tables describing the scenarios. They will help you verify the many options you have and what features are available in each scenario.

Table 1

image

Table 2

image

Table 3

image

(a) Works as legacy IDE but will perform better if Integration Components are present.
(b) Works as legacy network but will perform better if Integration Components are present.
(c) Hyper-V maximum VHD size is 2040 GB (8 GB short of 2 TB).
(d) Not limited by Hyper-V. NTFS maximum volume size is 256 TB.
(e) Microsoft iSCSI Software Target maximum VHD size is 16 TB.
(f) Requires SAN reconfiguration or NPIV support.
(g) For data volumes only (cannot be used for boot/system disks).
(h) Requires SAN reconfiguration or NPIV support.  All VHDs on the same LUN must be moved together.

References

https://blogs.msdn.com/tvoellm/archive/2008/01/02/hyper-v-scsi-vs-ide-do-you-really-need-an-ide-and-scsi-drive-for-best-performance.aspx
https://blogs.technet.com/jhoward/archive/2007/10/04/boot-from-scsi-in-virtual-server-vs-boot-from-ide-in-windows-server-virtualization.aspx

Screenshots

Screenshot of settings for scenario 2 in table 3 (VHD exposed as SCSI):
Hyper-V Storage 1

Screenshot of settings for scenario 8 in table 3 (iSCSI LUN passthrough exposed as IDE, which your guest can boot from):
Hyper-V Storage 2

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Si desean crear un laboratorio de clúster dentro de Hyper-V pueden seguir los pasos descritos en este

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Familiar with Virtual Server 2005 and shared disks for creating virtual clusters?  Well its different

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2008
    Still haven't figured out how to do the LUN passthru. Maybe some documentation/how-tos on much of these options would be helpful.

  • Anonymous
    June 05, 2010
    it is Familiar with Virtual Server 2005