You could combine method #1 with ManageIQ [1] to get unified management.

Barak.

[1] http://manageiq.org/

On 6 October 2015 at 19:25, Darrell Budic <[email protected]> wrote:
> I use method 1. One thing to consider is that the engine manages HA VMs, 
> migrations, etc. It doesn’t need much bandwidth, but if it can’t talk to 
> nodes, no migrations can happen, either for load balancing or in case of a 
> node or storage failure.
>
> If you had very solid networking, it’s probably fine, but I find it works 
> better in my situation to run a self hosted engine for each cluster.
>
>   -Darrell
>
>> On Oct 5, 2015, at 2:17 PM, wodel youchi <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I need some help to decide which is better / feasible with ovirt to manage 
>> two or more distant DCs.
>>
>> Let say that we have two distant DCs to virtualize with ovirt.
>>
>> we have two options to manage them:
>>
>> 1- install two engines, one on each DC, the good side is, if one DC is down, 
>> we can still manage the other one. the down side we will have two consoles 
>> to manage.
>>
>> 2- install one engine to manage the two DCs, the good side is the use of one 
>> console to rule them all :-) the down side is if the DC containing the 
>> engine become down, there is way to manage the other one.
>>
>> is there (will be there in the future) a way for example to create a slave 
>> engine in the second DC which can takeover and let the admin to manage the 
>> second DC?
>>
>> thanks in advance
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>
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-- 
Barak Korren
[email protected]
RHEV-CI Team
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