In my case, I don't have a SAN. Just a decent raid controller, and a bunch of 
smaller VMs doing single tasks.

Also, there are options in VMWare to allow/disallow swapping of memory of the 
guest OS. I don't know if Microsoft's Server 2008 VM has that setting.

--Matt Ross
  _____  

From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: NT System Admin Issues [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tue, 13 May 2008 23:40:33 -0700
Subject: RE: HIJACKED THREAD: Virtual Memory and Virtual Machines (WAS: RE: Why 
XP is doomed)

                      
    

So, you are talking about:    

     

a)       Disabling the page file inside VMs (A), (B) and (C)    

b)       Hoping that the OSes inside those machines never need more than  512MB 
of RAM    

     

?    

     

I suppose it’s possible. But do you want to risk it? I’m not  sure you’d gain 
very much. Most people put the VMs on a SAN (for performance as  well as HA 
reasons), so raw IOps shouldn’t be an issue.    

     

Cheers    

Ken    

     
    
    
    

From: Matthew W. Ross  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Wednesday, 14 May 2008 4:37 PM
  To: NT System Admin Issues
  Subject: HIJACKED THREAD: Virtual Memory and Virtual Machines (WAS: RE:  Why 
XP is doomed)            

     

Oooh...  that brings up some questions...
  
  I've always wondered if anybody has looked at Virtual Machines, and the use 
of  Page files... Let me explain.
  
  Let's say we have a box with 4 virtual machines. Each virtual machine is 
given  512 megs of Memory, and is running windows 2003. The host server has 4 
gigs of  ram, so the 2 gigs being used by the VMs is no problem, and plenty of 
room to  spare.
  
  Of the four MVs, you have:
  
  A) A DHCP/DNS/WINS server
  B) An Active Directory server
  C) An IIS server serving simple static pages
  D) An SQL Server with a moderately heavy database
  
  Could someone take VMs A, B, and C and give them a ZERO page file increasing  
performance for all parties? This is assuming that the jobs that VMs A, B, and  
C are all able to run their important but trivial tasks directly from memory,  
while VM D has less to compete with for IO to the harddrives?
  
  Has anybody done this kind of thing with success? 
  
  Just a thought. It's ripe for the squashing. Sm:)e.
  
  --Matt Ross    

         
  





        
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