A company will be replacing the external storage array that is currently providing storage to the vSphere environment. The architect must design a storage architecture for existing and future workloads. Company policy required storage separation of workloads by departments.
Which design decision should the architect make to satisfy the requirement and scale for additional departments?
The company policy requires storage separation of workloads by departments. To meet this requirement, the architect should design the storage architecture to create a dedicated storage volume for each department. This approach allows for logical separation of each department's data, ensuring that workloads from one department are isolated from the others.
Creating new storage volumes for new departments provides scalability. As new departments are added, new volumes can be provisioned without affecting the existing volumes or requiring reconfiguration of the existing department's storage.
An architect is reviewing the information provided by a customer for a new vSphere solution design. The customer requests that the solution use multiple network connections for the ESXi management network to increase resilience.
The customer's request to use multiple network connections for the ESXi management network is aimed at improving the resilience of the network, which directly supports the availability of the management network. By using multiple network connections (such as NIC teaming), the solution ensures that if one network connection fails, the other connections can maintain connectivity, thus improving the availability of the ESXi management network.
An architect is tasked with designing a new vSphere environment for a customer. The new environment must:
Be standardized, repeatable, and consistent
Contain the same common heterogenous components that run from commercial hardware across an on-premises, edge, and broad hybrid cloud eco-system
Provide intrinsic and intelligent security in every component from the hypervisor to the storage, networking, and management layers
Which VMware solution will satisfy these requirements?
VMware Cloud Foundation is an integrated solution that provides a standardized, repeatable, and consistent architecture for deploying and managing a vSphere-based environment. It is designed to run on heterogeneous hardware across on-premises, edge, and hybrid cloud environments. VMware Cloud Foundation integrates compute, storage, and networking in a single solution, making it ideal for environments that span multiple locations, including edge and hybrid cloud ecosystems.
VMware Cloud Foundation includes intrinsic and intelligent security features across the entire stack - from the hypervisor to storage, networking, and management layers, which aligns with the customer's security requirements.
An architect is designing a vSphere-based private cloud solution to support the following customer requirements:
The solution should support running 5,000 concurrent production compute workloads across the primary and secondary sites.
The solution should support running 1,000 development compute workloads within the secondary site.
The solution should support up to 50 management workloads across the primary and secondary site.
The solution must ensure the isolation of virtual infrastructure management operations between management and compute workloads.
The solution must ensure that hosting of any virtual infrastructure management workloads does not impact the amount of capacity available for compute workloads.
The solution must ensure that all production compute workloads are physically isolated from development compute workloads.
The solution must ensure that the operational management of compute workloads in the secondary site is possible in the event of a disaster affecting the primary site.
A combination of which four design decisions should the architect make to support the requirements? (Choose four.)
VMware vCenter instance in each management domain for the virtual infrastructure management of management workloads:
The customer requires isolation between management and compute workloads. By deploying vCenter instances in dedicated management domains, the management workloads can be handled separately from production and development compute workloads, ensuring isolation.
VMware vCenter instance in the secondary site management domain for the virtual infrastructure management of production compute workloads:
The secondary site should also have a vCenter instance for the management of production compute workloads. This ensures that operational management of production workloads is still possible even in the event of a disaster affecting the primary site, which aligns with the requirement to ensure the management of compute workloads in the secondary site.
VMware vCenter instance in the primary site management domain for the virtual infrastructure management of production compute workloads:
A vCenter instance in the primary site management domain should handle the management of production compute workloads. The primary site is typically where most production workloads reside, and having the vCenter instance here ensures that management operations can be performed efficiently.
Separate management domain within each site for hosting local management workloads:
To ensure that management operations are isolated and that the management workloads do not affect compute workloads, a separate management domain should be deployed in each site. This ensures that the management functions do not consume compute resources that are intended for production or development workloads.
An architect is working on the design documentation for a new vSphere solution. The architect has completed a conceptual model based on the following requirement:
REQ001 -- The solution must use shared storage
What could the architect include in the logical design to meet this requirement?
The requirement specifies that the solution must use shared storage, which refers to a storage solution that can be accessed by multiple ESXi hosts simultaneously. NFS (Network File System) is a widely used method for providing shared storage in a vSphere environment. By including the NFS mount point and the IP address of the NFS server, the architect can specify how the shared storage will be configured and accessed by the ESXi hosts, meeting the requirement for shared storage.
Fatima
6 days agoCorinne
7 days ago