Resource allocation shares, Resource allocation reservation – VMware vSphere vCenter Server 4.0 User Manual

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Resource Allocation Shares

Shares specify the relative priority or importance of a virtual machine (or resource pool). If a virtual machine

has twice as many shares of a resource as another virtual machine, it is entitled to consume twice as much of

that resource when these two virtual machines are competing for resources.
Shares are typically specified as High, Normal, or Low and these values specify share values with a 4:2:1 ratio,

respectively. You can also select Custom to assign a specific number of shares (which expresses a proportional

weight) to each virtual machine.
Specifying shares makes sense only with regard to sibling virtual machines or resource pools, that is, virtual

machines or resource pools with the same parent in the resource pool hierarchy. Siblings share resources

according to their relative share values, bounded by the reservation and limit. When you assign shares to a

virtual machine, you always specify the priority for that virtual machine relative to other powered-on virtual

machines.
The following table shows the default CPU and memory share values for a virtual machine. For resource pools,

the default CPU and memory share values are the same, but must be multiplied as if the resource pool were

a virtual machine with four VCPUs and 16 GB of memory.

Table 1-1. Share Values

Setting

CPU share values

Memory share values

High

2000 shares per virtual CPU

20 shares per megabyte of configured virtual machine

memory.

Normal

1000 shares per virtual CPU

10 shares per megabyte of configured virtual machine

memory.

Low

500 shares per virtual CPU

5 shares per megabyte of configured virtual machine

memory.

For example, an SMP virtual machine with two virtual CPUs and 1GB RAM with CPU and memory shares set

to Normal has 2x1000=2000 shares of CPU and 10x1024=10240 shares of memory.

N

OTE

Virtual machines with more than one virtual CPU are called SMP (symmetric multiprocessing) virtual

machines. ESX/ESXi supports up to eight virtual CPUs per virtual machine. This is also called eight-way SMP

support.

The relative priority represented by each share changes when a new virtual machine is powered on. This affects

all virtual machines in the same resource pool. All of the virtual machines have the same number of VCPUs.

Consider the following examples.

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Two CPU-bound virtual machines run on a host with 8GHz of aggregate CPU capacity. Their CPU shares

are set to Normal and get 4GHz each.

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A third CPU-bound virtual machine is powered on. Its CPU shares value is set to High, which means it

should have twice as many shares as the machines set to Normal. The new virtual machine receives 4GHz

and the two other machines get only 2GHz each. The same result occurs if the user specifies a custom

share value of 2000 for the third virtual machine.

Resource Allocation Reservation

A reservation specifies the guaranteed minimum allocation for a virtual machine.
vCenter Server or ESX/ESXi allows you to power on a virtual machine only if there are enough unreserved

resources to satisfy the reservation of the virtual machine. The server guarantees that amount even when the

physical server is heavily loaded. The reservation is expressed in concrete units (megahertz or megabytes).

Chapter 1 Getting Started with Resource Management

VMware, Inc.

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