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meadIT wrote: » Check out the Uber Celerra VSA from EMC. It's a free virtual SAN for non-production. It is managed using Unisphere and can present NFS, iSCSI, and CIFS targets. It can also do replication if you set up two of them. If you're looking to set up a complete lab fully in workstation, you would have the following running in workstation: 1) vCenter (since 64 bit is required) 2) ESXi hosts 3) ESX hosts 4) VSAs You can then run your lab VMs under the virtualized ESXi and ESX hosts.
meadIT wrote: » I can't think of anything that you wouldn't be able to test for the VCP using workstation on a laptop (except for Fibre Channel storage). The drawback is going to be lower performance than a standalone ESXi server, but that all depends on how many guests you want running at one time. You'll also be limited to 32 bit guests running under the virtual ESX(i) hosts, which is why you'll need to run vCenter directly under workstation instead of under one of the virtual ESX(i) servers. If you decide to just build the dedicated ESXi box, you can also run the VSA under that. You'd still need to run virtual instances of ESX(i) on the dedicated box to test out vMotion. I'm getting ready to upgrade my i7 laptop to 8 GB RAM and am planning to do all of my VCAP-DCA studies in that environment.
meadIT wrote: » I can't think of anything that you wouldn't be able to test for the VCP using workstation on a laptop (except for Fibre Channel storage). The drawback is going to be lower performance than a standalone ESXi server, but that all depends on how many guests you want running at one time. You'll also be limited to 32 bit guests running under the virtual ESX(i) hosts, which is why you'll need to run vCenter directly under workstation instead of under one of the virtual ESX(i) servers.
MentholMoose wrote: » VDR is covered on the VCP, but you won't be able to run it on a virtual ESX/ESXi 4.1 host since it's 64-bit. I think it needs to run on an ESX/ESXi host in a cluster rather than outside of it like you can do with vCenter.
EruMais wrote: » Do you think Workstation is sufficient experience to obtain something like a VCP? I realize that the class is still required in that case. I'm still planning on building a dedicated ESXi box, but I don't really have the funds for a physical NAS at this time. If Workstation is robust enough for prepping to VCP, then that is even better. Here's my current situation... the PC I'm running on now is a q9550 with EP45-UD3P mobo (both cited as ESXi 4.0 compatible) and 4GB RAM. I have a laptop with a dual core i5 and 8 GB RAM (maxed out). I'm looking to then build a compatible AMD box because it's cheap, or, possibly a Xeon box to future proof my virtual studies. I don't really have the funds to purchase a physical NAS in addition. So.. would it be better to upgrade my PC to something like a Sandy Bridge build with 16 GB RAM and just use the laptop/PC in conjunction for Workstation 7.1 virtual testing? Or, would it still be better to build a dedicated ESXi host? I was also considering taking my current PC hardware and making that into a server, however upgrading to 16 GB in DDR2 is butt expensive now and replacing my PC in addition is not cost-effective.
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