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Showing posts with label 64 bit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 64 bit. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 February 2013

VMware vSphere can virtualize itself + 64-bit nested guests

Running VMware ESXi inside a virtual machine is a great way to experiment with different configurations and features without building out a whole lab full of hardware and storage. Virtualization enthusiasts everywhere have benefited from the ability to run ESXi on ESXi, first introduced with the vSphere 4 release.
VMware vSphere 5 makes it easier than ever to virtualize hypervisor hosts. With new capabilities to run nested 64-bit guests and take snapshots of virtual ESXi VMs, the sky is the limit for your cloud infrastructure development lab. Heck, you can even run Hyper-V on top of vSphere 5 — not that you’d want to.

Physical Host Setup

The physical host running VMware ESXi 5 requires just a few configuration changes; here is a guide:
  • Install VMware ESXi 5 on a physical host and configure networking, storage, and other aspects as needed
  • Configure a vSwitch and/or Port Group to have Promiscuous Mode enabled
  • Create a second Port Group named “Trunk” with VLAN ID All (4095) if you want to use VLANs on virtual hypervisors
  • Log in to Tech Support Mode (iLO or ssh) and make the following tweak to enable nested 64-bit guests
    echo 'vhv.allow = "TRUE"' >> /etc/vmware/config

Virtual VMware ESXi Machine (vESXi) Creation

For various reasons, it’s not feasible to clone virtual ESXi VMs. As an alternative, create a fully-configured shell VM to use as a template — it can be cloned before ESXi is installed.
Create a new VM with the following guidance:
  • Guest OS: Linux / Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (64-bit)
  • 2 virtual sockets, 2+ GB RAM
  • 4 NICs — connect NIC 1 to the management network and the rest to the “Trunk” network:
  • Thin provisioned virtual disks work fine
  • Finish creating the VM, then edit the following settings
    • Options/General Options: change Guest Operating System to Other – VMware ESXi 5.x
    • CPU/MMU Virtualization: Use Intel VT … EPT… ( bottom radio button)
  • Don’t power this VM on — keep it to act as a template
  • Clone and install VMware ESXi via ISO image or PXE boot
  • Add to vCenter and configure virtual ESXi hosts for action

Nested 64-bit Guests

With the release of VMware vSphere 5, nested guests can be 64-bit operating systems. Just be sure to make the change to /etc/vmware/config on the physical host as indicated above.
Nested guests can be migrated with vMotion between virtual or physical VMware ESXi hosts; this requires a vMotion network and shared storage.

Nested Hyper-V Virtual Machines

It is possible to run other hypervisors as vSphere virtual machines, and even power on nested VMs. Here you can see Hyper-V running a CentOS virtual machine — all on VMware ESXi. Talk about disrupting the space-time continuum!

A couple of extra tweaks are needed to enable this, and performance is not great. Nevertheless, an amazing feat of engineering from VMware!
Do the following to enable Hyper-V on VMware ESXi:
  • Add hypervisor.cpuid.v0 = FALSE to the VM configuration

  • Add —-:—-:—-:—-:—-:—-:–h-:—- to the CPU mask for Level 1 ECX (Intel)

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Enabling 64-bit VMs on nested ESXi 5.1

In my home lab, I have a 2-node cluster with two virtual ESXi 5.1. When I tried to boot a 64-bit on these hosts I received the following error:

"Longmode is unsupported. It is required for 64-bit guest OS support. On Intel systems, longmode requires VT-x to be enabled in the BIOS. On nested virtual ESX hosts, longmode requires the "Virtualized Hardware Virtualization" flag to be enabled on the outer VM."

I seem to remember that in version 5.0 you had to configure a given parameter in the ESXi console. For ESXi 5.1 this has changed according to this VMware KB.

It states the following:

"Virtualized HV is fully  supported for virtual hardware version 9 VMs on hosts that support  Intel VT-x and EPT or AMD-V and RVI. To enable virtualized HV, use the web client and navigate to the processor settings screen. Check the  box next to  "Expose hardware-assisted virtualization to the guest operating system."  This setting is not available under the traditional C# client."

So, access the web client, locate the VM, right click -> Edit settings, and check the box as mentioned (for the parent VM, not the virtual ESXi...). It works like a charm, see screendump below: