Data Object - ClusterFailoverLevelAdmissionControlPolicy(vim.cluster.FailoverLevelAdmissionControlPolicy)

Extends
ClusterDasAdmissionControlPolicy
See also
ClusterSlotPolicy
Since
vSphere API 4.0

Data Object Description

The ClusterFailoverLevelAdmissionControlPolicy defines the number of host failures that should be tolerated and still guarantee enough unfragmented resources to failover all powered on virtual machines on those failed hosts.

When you use the failover level policy, vSphere HA partitions resources into slots. A slot represents the minimum CPU and memory resources that are required to support any powered-on virtual machine in the cluster.

With the failover level policy in place, HA uses the following slot calculations to control virtual machine migration within the cluster:

  1. Calculate the slot size from CPU and memory reservations. The CPU value is the largest CPU reservation for all powered-on virtual machines in the cluster. The memory value is the largest memory reservation (plus memory overhead).

    If your cluster contains any virtual machines that have much larger reservations than the others, they will distort slot size calculation. To avoid this, you can specify an upper bound for slot sizes; use the configuration editor in the vSphere Client to set the das.slotCpuInMHz and das.slotMemInMB attributes. When you use these attributes, there is a risk that resource fragmentation will cause virtual machines with resource requirements larger than the slot size to be assigned multiple slots. In a cluster that is close to capacity, there might be enough slots in aggregate for HA to successfully failover a virtual machine. However, if those slots are located on multiple hosts, a virtual machine assigned multiple slots cannot use them because a virtual machine can run on only a single host at a time.

  2. Determine how many slots each host in the cluster can hold. HA uses the CPU and memory resources in a host's root resource pool to determine host slot capacity, not the total physical resources of the host. Resources used for virtualization purposes are not included. HA uses connected hosts that are not in maintenance mode and that do not have any HA errors.

    The CPU slot resource is the host CPU resource amount divided by the CPU component of the slot size; the result is rounded down. HA makes the same calculation for host memory resource amount. HA compares the results; the lower of the two numbers is the host slot capacity.

  3. Determine the current failover capacity of the cluster. This is the number of hosts (starting from the largest) that can fail and still leave enough slots to satisfy all of the powered-on virtual machines.

  4. Compare the current failover capacity to the configured failoverLevel. If the current failover capacity is less than the configured failover level, HA disallows the operation.

Properties

Name Type Description
failoverLevelxsd:int

Number of host failures that should be tolerated, still guaranteeing sufficient resources to restart virtual machines on available hosts.
slotPolicy*ClusterSlotPolicy

A policy for how to compute the slot size. If left unset, the slot is computed using the maximum reservations and memory overhead of any powered on virtual machine in the cluster.

Since vSphere API 5.1
Properties inherited from ClusterDasAdmissionControlPolicy
resourceReductionToToleratePercent
Properties inherited from DynamicData
None
*Need not be set
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