ONTAP Discussions

iscsi for Linux VM

luciferHK
2,156 Views

Can we map iSCSI lun to Linux VM?  Pros and Cons to be taken care. 

3 REPLIES 3

SpindleNinja
2,114 Views

Sure. 

 

It's called a RDM when you do that.  https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.0/com.vmware.vsphere.storage.doc/GUID-9E206B41-4B2D-48F0-85A3-B8715D78E846.html  

 

Pros/Cons... can depend why you want to do it.   

 

migration is probably the only real "con" that stands out when I've worked with these in the past.    Which isn't horrible, it's (usually) just a few extra steps.  

paul_stejskal
2,054 Views

Alternatively, you can map directly iSCSI to a VM. I've done it all the time in Windows VMs. Procedure is the same as a regular Linux iSCSI LUN.

 

You asked for pros and cons, what are you comparing to?

Why do you need it?

What are you using now?

liuh
121 Views

hi

This situation is OK, which has the advantages of low hardware cost, easy operation, strong scalability, etc.

The disadvantages are performance loss, network dependencies, security issues, management complexity, and risk of a single point of failure. In actual applications, you need to select a storage scheme based on specific application scenarios and requirements

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