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Multiple transport modes? SAN transport mode with Agent?

I am re-configuring our server and now have the option to do Agent-less on the majority of our VMs. Our Core is a physical box, and has 10gbE access to one of our NASes on the san, but not the other, so some VMs cannot be transported over that method.

 

My question is two fold: Can SAN be used for Agents as well as Agent-less? IE our Exchange and SQL servers will want to remain Agent for the Log Truncation - can they still take advantage of SAN transport? And that brings up - can one core do both, on a per-vm basis or is it all or nothing? IE 90% of our VMs are accessible via 10gbE to our physical core, but several are not (local storage on ESXi hosts). 

 

Ideally we'd have a mix of Agent and Agent-less, using SAN Transport unless they're on an unreachable datastore and then they'd use LAN NBD. Is there any way to tell which vms are using which policy, other than opening the VM and looking at NIC traffic during a backup?

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  • I see, you are correct, I did miss that. If you don't turn off auto-mount then the Core will mount the ESXi Datastores. It will not format them, nor initialize, but it will mount them. So you're not 'in' Pandora's box yet, but a foot away for someone to accidentally initialize them one day or something like that.

    However one the iSCSI attachments that you already use are there and active, Windows will try to mount them anyhow, as the OS is already aware of them, so they are not of a concern. Future ones though you will have to remember that Windows will not 'auto' mount or find them and you'll have to manually do that. I won't say most, but I'd guess over 1/2 of all repositories I have see are iSCSI, and existing connections are fine, and you can setup future ones, however Windows just doesn't essentially 'auto-search' for them anymore once you perform the command.

    Does that make sense? You are correct I did miss that.
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  • I see, you are correct, I did miss that. If you don't turn off auto-mount then the Core will mount the ESXi Datastores. It will not format them, nor initialize, but it will mount them. So you're not 'in' Pandora's box yet, but a foot away for someone to accidentally initialize them one day or something like that.

    However one the iSCSI attachments that you already use are there and active, Windows will try to mount them anyhow, as the OS is already aware of them, so they are not of a concern. Future ones though you will have to remember that Windows will not 'auto' mount or find them and you'll have to manually do that. I won't say most, but I'd guess over 1/2 of all repositories I have see are iSCSI, and existing connections are fine, and you can setup future ones, however Windows just doesn't essentially 'auto-search' for them anymore once you perform the command.

    Does that make sense? You are correct I did miss that.
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