08-Oct-2023 18:46
Hi
i have a problem after relocation cpu core and the configuration back to default
Before : guest A : on slot 2 with 4 core
After : guest A : on slot 3 and 4 with 2 core per slot
after the guest up and check the configuration back to default, is that mean configuration on existing slot not duplicate ?
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
08-Oct-2023 20:56
Hi Herdi,
When you do adding cores to vcmp guest, it must be in "Configured" state, then when you are done with the settings must put it in "Provisioned" state. Finally when you want to use the guest you must set it as "Deployed" state. It takes some minutes o get the state change hence wait for the processes to complete before moving to the bext step.
If you have a deployed vCMP guest, and you decide that you need to allocate more CPU cores per slot to the guest than you had originally allocated, you can increase the number of cores per slot for the guest.
To do this, you'll first need to set the guest state from Deployed to Configured. Once you've increased the number of cores per slot for the guest, you can set the guest back to the Deployed state.
Note that when switching between guest states, the process can take several minutes for the guest to shut down cleanly and restart again.
Virtualized Clustered Multiprocessing (vCMP) is a feature of the BIG-IP® system that allows you to run multiple instances of BIG-IP software on a single hardware platform. VCMP ™ assigns a specific share of the hardware resources for each BIG-IP instance, or guest vCMP (Guest). Each Guest you create behaves as a separate, independent BIG-IP device, having its own CPU, memory, and disk space. Each Guest also has its own configuration file, log files, and Kernel version.
Virtualized Clustered Multiprocessing (vCMP) is a feature of the BIG-IP® system that allows you to run multiple instances of BIG-IP software on a single hardware platform. VCMP ™ assigns a specific share of the hardware resources for each BIG-IP instance, or guest vCMP (Guest). Each Guest you create behaves as a separate, independent BIG-IP device, having its own CPU, memory, and disk space. Each Guest also has its own configuration file, log files, and Kernel version.
VCMP ™ is built on CMP F5 Networks technology. VCMP allows cluster members (ie Slots within a chassis or Microkernel Traffic Management - TMM instances on a device) to work together to form a distributed, coherent, traffic-processing system to share the traffic. VCMP takes this a step further by allowing you to build and run virtualized BIG-IP modules using a built-in hypervisor based on virtualization standards.
This creates a guest (Guest) in bridge mode (Briged). When creating a Guest, if you get an error message about / shared / vmdisks see the disk space. VCMP needs 24,354 MB of additional space. You can or should delete existing virtual disks until you have freed up 24,354 MB of disk space.
(Figure_01)
(Figure_02)
(Figure_03)
(Figure_04)
(Figure_05)
(Figure_06)
(Figure_07)
(Figure_08)
(Figure_09)
(Figure_10)
(Figure 11)
(Figure_12)
(Figure_13)
(Figure_14)
(Figure_15)
(Figure 16)
(Figure 17)
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K14218
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K14088
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K33853204
Please let me know if you still face issues.
HTH
F5 Design Engineer
🙏🙏
08-Oct-2023 20:56
Hi Herdi,
When you do adding cores to vcmp guest, it must be in "Configured" state, then when you are done with the settings must put it in "Provisioned" state. Finally when you want to use the guest you must set it as "Deployed" state. It takes some minutes o get the state change hence wait for the processes to complete before moving to the bext step.
If you have a deployed vCMP guest, and you decide that you need to allocate more CPU cores per slot to the guest than you had originally allocated, you can increase the number of cores per slot for the guest.
To do this, you'll first need to set the guest state from Deployed to Configured. Once you've increased the number of cores per slot for the guest, you can set the guest back to the Deployed state.
Note that when switching between guest states, the process can take several minutes for the guest to shut down cleanly and restart again.
Virtualized Clustered Multiprocessing (vCMP) is a feature of the BIG-IP® system that allows you to run multiple instances of BIG-IP software on a single hardware platform. VCMP ™ assigns a specific share of the hardware resources for each BIG-IP instance, or guest vCMP (Guest). Each Guest you create behaves as a separate, independent BIG-IP device, having its own CPU, memory, and disk space. Each Guest also has its own configuration file, log files, and Kernel version.
Virtualized Clustered Multiprocessing (vCMP) is a feature of the BIG-IP® system that allows you to run multiple instances of BIG-IP software on a single hardware platform. VCMP ™ assigns a specific share of the hardware resources for each BIG-IP instance, or guest vCMP (Guest). Each Guest you create behaves as a separate, independent BIG-IP device, having its own CPU, memory, and disk space. Each Guest also has its own configuration file, log files, and Kernel version.
VCMP ™ is built on CMP F5 Networks technology. VCMP allows cluster members (ie Slots within a chassis or Microkernel Traffic Management - TMM instances on a device) to work together to form a distributed, coherent, traffic-processing system to share the traffic. VCMP takes this a step further by allowing you to build and run virtualized BIG-IP modules using a built-in hypervisor based on virtualization standards.
This creates a guest (Guest) in bridge mode (Briged). When creating a Guest, if you get an error message about / shared / vmdisks see the disk space. VCMP needs 24,354 MB of additional space. You can or should delete existing virtual disks until you have freed up 24,354 MB of disk space.
(Figure_01)
(Figure_02)
(Figure_03)
(Figure_04)
(Figure_05)
(Figure_06)
(Figure_07)
(Figure_08)
(Figure_09)
(Figure_10)
(Figure 11)
(Figure_12)
(Figure_13)
(Figure_14)
(Figure_15)
(Figure 16)
(Figure 17)
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K14218
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K14088
https://my.f5.com/manage/s/article/K33853204
Please let me know if you still face issues.
HTH
F5 Design Engineer
🙏🙏
08-Oct-2023 21:35
Hi
Thank you for giving advice
i didnt provision state just back to configure > add cpu core > Deployed
maybe that why guest back to default configure
i want to ask every add or delete resource should we provision state before deploy ?
Thanks
08-Oct-2023 21:46
ok, i see
thanks for the information
maybe that why after change cpu core and upgrade on vcmp host, that why on the host allocation cpu core back to existing
Thanks
08-Oct-2023 21:38
every VM need to go through this process to preserve their state, its a kind of hibernate the child VM config , to save them from config damage or config corruption.