Stretching
Clusters
You can stretch a vSphere cluster in
the management domain or
in
a VI workload domain across two availability zones within a region. Both availability zones
must contain an equal number of hosts to ensure failover in case any of the availability
zones goes down.
The default management cluster must be
stretched before a workload domain cluster can be stretched. This ensures that the NSX
control plane and management VMs (vCenter, NSX, SDDC Manager) remain accessible if the
stretched cluster in the second availability zone goes down.
You cannot stretch a cluster in the
following conditions:
- The cluster uses static IP addresses for theNSXHost Overlay Network TEPs.
- The cluster has a vSAN remote datastore mounted on it.
- The cluster shares a vSAN Storage Policy with any other clusters.
- The cluster is enabled for Workload Management (vSphere with Tanzu).
You may want to stretch a
cluster for the following reasons.
- Planned maintenanceYou can perform a planned maintenance on an availability zone without any downtime and then migrate the applications after the maintenance is completed.
- Automated recoveryStretching a cluster automatically initiates VM restart and recovery, and has a low recovery time for the majority of unplanned failures.
- Disaster avoidanceWith a stretched cluster, you can prevent service outages before an impending disaster.
This release of VMware Cloud
Foundation does not support deleting or unstretching a cluster.