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6 planning with capacity advisor, Getting ready, Task: understand current resource usage – HP Matrix Operating Environment Software User Manual

Page 135: Task: plan server consolidation, Understanding the consolidation task, Understanding

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6 Planning with Capacity Advisor

Getting ready

To get maximum value from the Capacity Advisor tools, it is important to:

Be familiar with the HP Systems Insight Manager framework

Be familiar with the basic operation of Capacity Advisor

Be familiar with HP Matrix OE visualization

Have a clear question you are trying to answer

Have plenty of utilization data collected for Capacity Advisor

Have appropriate access roles on the servers about which you are developing the plan

Understand the equipment well enough to know what is physically possible (such as the
maximum number of CPU cores) and what is practical (such as when to use 1 GB DIMMs with
lots of slots versus when 4 GB DIMMs are more appropriate.) HP software can account for
various power saving associated with specific DIMM.

In addition, it can be very valuable to collect data on a test system to understand the real utilization
characteristics of the applications you are considering.

Task: Understand current resource usage

For specific descriptions of each field shown on the user interface screens, click the

on the screen.

Table 21 Checklist — Obtaining reports on current resource usage

Related procedure(s)

Task

“Ascertaining the data collection availability for a set of

servers” (page 45)

Collect data for a period of time that fully reflects
your business cycle(s).

“The report wizard” (page 50)
“Creating an historic utilization report” (page 51)

Run utilization reports for selected resources of
interest.

“Creating a cost allocation report” (page 55)

Estimate current cost allocation for selected
resources.

Task: Plan server consolidation

This section starts with a general procedure for consolidating servers (

“Understanding the

consolidation task” (page 135)

), followed by an example of manual server consolidation (

“Example

consolidation: Stacking applications on an existing server” (page 136)

). The second half of this

section shows how to automate server consolidation using the HP Smart Solver (

“Automating the

consolidation task” (page 146)

); also followed by an example (

“Example consolidation: Automating

stacking on a “what-if” server” (page 147)

).

Understanding the consolidation task

There are three fundamental approaches to consolidating servers:

Stacking workloads (representing applications) into standalone servers or

nPartitions

.

Stacking

virtual machines

onto a single physical system or nPartitions.

Stacking nPartitions and

virtual partitions

into

complexes

.

The task description below is based on stacking server workloads onto one virtual machine and
VM host. For other consolidations, the changes made when editing the scenario would differ.

Getting ready

135