09-04-2013 06:58 PM - edited 07-04-2021 12:45 AM
Hi,
According to http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/ise/1.2/installation_guide/ise_vmware.html#wp1056074, tabl 4-1 discusses storage requirement for ISE 1.2 in VM environment. It recommends VMFS.
What are the implications when using NFS instead? Is this just a recommendation or an actual requirement?
At the moment, we use Netapp array which uses NFS for all vApps. It will be difficult to justify a creation an additional FC HBA just for this one vApp. Please explain.
TIA,
Byung
09-04-2013 07:03 PM
That same document that you've referenced explicitly recommends against the use of NFS for storage.
I vaguely remember an ISE implementation that couldn't even get off the ground due to NFS storage. The ISO would not complete boot and therefore setup wouldn't even run.
ISE is a wonderful technology, I would work to justify the creation of an additional FC HBA.
Kind Regards,
Kevin
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09-04-2013 09:16 PM
If you refer to
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/ise/1.2/installation_guide/ise_vmware.html
It says :
09-07-2013 07:28 PM
ISE VM versions are not installing. After initial section to choose boot option (number 1 is selected for keyboard and mouse), vmlinuz is loaded, initrd.img is loaded, then two more lines of dots are showing on the VM console screen, with "ready" at the end, and nothing is happening.
I was waiting for over an hour for the next step (first with 1.1.2 and then with 1.1.1), and in the ISE hardware installation guide is clearly written "20 minutes". When used memory and processor were checked for the VM, the lines were flat on 0%. The ESX host hardware spec was approved in Cisco ISE HLD. The only difference is that the customer is using NFS file system not VMFS, but nowhere in the installation guide is written that the image cannot be installed on NFS.
This is the issue with file system. As in installation guide vmfs3 is being used.
09-26-2013 06:30 PM
For understanding the difference between both, there is an article
http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=1185021
http://storagetexan.com/2010/03/25/the-debate-why-nfs-vs-block-access-for-osapplications/
also there is not much difference as if you existing environment is NFS so you should use it .(It will save cost)
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