Network Pool Management
When you create a VI workload domain or
add a host or vSphere cluster to an existing workload domain (management or VI), you do not
need to enter IP addresses manually. Network pools automatically assign static IP addresses
to vSAN, NFS, iSCSI, and vMotion VMkernel ports.
A network pool is a collection of subnets within an
layer-2 network domain. Depending on the storage option, it includes information about
subnets reserved for the vMotion and vSAN, NFS, or iSCSI networks that are required for
adding a host to the
SDDC
Manager
inventory.
Storage Being Used | Required Networks in Network Pool |
---|---|
vSAN | vMotion and vSAN |
NFS | vMotion and NFS |
vSAN and NFS | vMotion, vSAN, and NFS |
VMFS on FC | vMotion only or vMotion and NFS |
vVols on FC | vMotion only or vMotion and NFS |
vVols on iSCSI | vMotion and iSCSI |
vVols on NFS | vMotion and NFS |
The network pool also contains a range of IP addresses, called an inclusion range. IP addresses
from the inclusion ranges are assigned to the VMkernel ports on the host. The use of
inclusion ranges allows you to limit the IP addresses that are consumed from a given
subnet. You can add more inclusion ranges to expand the use of the provided subnet.
A default network pool is created during bring-up. This
network pool is automatically associated with the management domain. Network information
for this network pool is based on the deployment parameter workbook you provided during
bring-up. This network pool contains vMotion and vSAN networks only - an NFS network is
not supported in this network pool. If the vSAN and vMotion networks in your management
domain are in the same layer-2 network domain, you can expand the default network pool.
You can also expand the default network pool if you expand the management domain by
adding a host.
To create a VI workload domain with hosts in a
different layer-2 network domain than the management domain, you must create a new
network pool. Also, if you want to use external NFS or VMFS on FC storage, you must
create a new network pool. A network pool can contain both vSAN and NFS networks.
You can also create a workload domain with multiple
vSphere clusters, each with its own network pool. You can have multiple vSphere clusters
within a workload domain to provide a separate fail over domain (a VM only fails over
between hosts in a cluster). Multiple vSphere clusters also provide isolation for
security reasons and are also useful for grouping servers of a particular type of
configuration together. Multiple vSphere clusters can also be used to handle the growth.
The original servers used in the default vSphere cluster can get outdated at some point.
Newer server models can then be added to a new cluster in the workload domain and
workloads can be migrated at a leisurely pace.