Which two technologies achieve the goal?

Your network contains an Active Directory domain. The domain contains 10 file servers. The
file servers connect to a Fibre Channel SAN. You plan to implement 20 Hyper-V hosts in a
failover cluster.
The Hyper-V hosts will not have host bus adapters (HBAs).
You need to recommend a solution for the planned implementation that meets the following
requirements:
The virtual machines must support live migration.
The virtual hard disks (VHDs) must be stored on the file servers.
Which two technologies achieve the goal? Each correct answer presents a complete
solution.

Your network contains an Active Directory domain. The domain contains 10 file servers. The
file servers connect to a Fibre Channel SAN. You plan to implement 20 Hyper-V hosts in a
failover cluster.
The Hyper-V hosts will not have host bus adapters (HBAs).
You need to recommend a solution for the planned implementation that meets the following
requirements:
The virtual machines must support live migration.
The virtual hard disks (VHDs) must be stored on the file servers.
Which two technologies achieve the goal? Each correct answer presents a complete
solution.

A.
Cluster Shared Volume (CSV)

B.
An NFS share

C.
Storage pools

D.
SMB 3.0 shares



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Stole

Stole

The Hyper-V host will not have HBAs -> not A -> C and D -> OK!

movieman

movieman

It is A and D. You can use iSCSI to setup CSV without HBA.

Juerg

Juerg

In the description are 10 File Server mentioned, no clusters. Is this the reason why the CSV is not a valid answer?

Jermo

Jermo

I leaned towards A&D, but after seeing C&D listed, I feel that may be the correct answer.

A) Key word is SAN. Without HBAs, it’s not an option. I know someone mentioned you can use iSCSI and would like to see an example of this.
B) Clearly not correct
C) Pretty basic and meets requirements
D) Recommended by MS and supports requirements.

Look here for more info – https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/Dn610883.aspx

puck

puck

Okay People, I spent an extraordinary amount of time on this, and now you won’t have to 🙂

C + D = Correct!

Windows Server 2012 SOFS (Scale-Out File Server) dramatically simplifies managing the spiderweb of Hyper-V server-to-storage connections. When combined with the performance and scalability enhancements now in SMB 3.0, it takes much of the interconnecting out of your hands.

With SOFS in place, accessing a Hyper-V VM requires little more than a UNC path: \\server\share\folder\vm.vhdx (This means there is no need for HBA.) SMB 3.0 automatically handles everything else—redundancy, load balancing, failover and the gamut of fault tolerance networking goals. Even the SOFS cluster itself is active-active in nature, which means no server purchase goes unused in driving the storage needs of your Hyper-V VMs.

Also:The storage requirement of a SOFS is cluster supported storage. That includes:

SAS SAN
iSCSI SAN
FIBRE CHANNEL SAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FCoE SAN
PCI RAID (like the Dell VRTX)
… and SAS attached shared JBOD + Storage Spaces

Reference: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/jj992578.aspx
Reference: http://www.aidanfinn.com/?p=15345

Not A:
If you are using a Fibre Channel storage area network (SAN), each host that will access the storage array must have a host bus adapter (HBA) installed. Additionally, make sure that the v hosts are zoned accordingly so that they can access the storage array.

Not B:

RR

RR

Storage Spaces with a storage pool in a cluster only supports SAS disks.

What’s wrong with adding disks to the fileservers using FC and create a SMB 3.0 share.
The HV servers can connect to it and stor the VHD’s in the remote share.

A,D looks good

Chrisjones

Chrisjones

Which now that I look again “You plan to implement 20 Hyper-V hosts in a
failover cluster.”

So CSV is definitely needed.
The link does list the requirements for live migration.

source website

source website

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