VCAP: VMware Certified Advanced Professional Discussions

  • 1.  Building my own lab

    Posted Jul 31, 2023 08:52 PM

    Hello Everybody

    I'm looking forward to prepare a couple of vmware certifications, so I'm considering to build my own lab.

    I'm aiming at one physical machine composed of the following parts  : GIGABYTE AM4 X570S AORUS Elite AX

    AMD Processeur Ryzen 9 5950X

    2 x Crucial RAM 32Go DDR4 3200MHz CL22

    3 x Crucial P3 1To M.2 PCIe Gen3

    4 x Crucial MX500 2To

    Network card : to be determined. You can recommend any.

    The main idea here is to run a physical ESXi 8 and to have 3 nested ESXi + one tiny vCenter VMs

    Three nested ESXi are for vSAN (maybe even considering a fourth one for ESA).

    Each NVME is destined to be passed to a nested ESXi, and same for 3 of the 4 2To SSDs

    The fourth 2To SSD will host the vCenter VM files and the 3 or 4 Nested ESXi VM files.

    What do you think about this build ? Do you see any error, or anything wrong ? Any incompatibility with Vmware ESX 8 ? What would be the best 1Gb Network Card fully compatible ? I just need 1 port as all will stay within the physical ESXI.

    Thank you for your help

     



  • 2.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Jul 31, 2023 09:13 PM

    I have been running a home lab for the last couple of years on a Supermicro E300. Has an 8 core CPU (16 threads) and I’ve put in 128GB or ram. With this I have run up to 8 nested hosts and 2 vCenters. I use this set up to do demos when I teach the VCP / VCAP courses and I’ve been really happy with it. 

    You might find that 64GB of ram is too restrictive so I would definitely recommend going for 128GB or more if funds allow. 



  • 3.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Jul 31, 2023 09:31 PM

    Thanks for your reply Tim
    I was also considering using 128Gb or RAM.

    But I know that I won't exceed 4 Nested ESXi and only for preparing the vSAN certification.

    The main reason for the 16 cores CPU is that I would certainly dedicate 4 CPus to the physical host (2 for vCenter and 2 for running ESXi ) and leave the reste for the nested ESXI which will run just a couple of VMs at most. 

    Basically I was thinking that 32 GB of RAM per ESXi host is a little bit overkill. But I may listen to your advice.

    I must say that I can afford a 120€ cost for 64GB more.

     



  • 4.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 01, 2023 06:05 AM
    I would also always add more RAM if I could, however 64 should be fine. Good example of what you can achieve with just 32GB here: https://williamlam.com/2020/11/complete-vsphere-with-tanzu-homelab-with-just-32gb-of-memory.html more RAM just makes it too easy


  • 5.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 11, 2023 07:12 AM

    And what are you going to test? Is it only to run some nested ESXi hosts and configure vSAN? Do you want to do any other functional / performance tests or just to have a lab with the vCenter console avaialble to check things, etc?

     



  • 6.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 11, 2023 08:38 PM

    Guys, I don't know who still considers building a home lab? With all these electricity bills, does it really make sense? 

    What if in September or October - VMware announces vSphere9 with new Hardware requirements? What next? 

    If only nested - than its ok. 



  • 7.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 23, 2023 02:22 PM

    It definitely makes sense, IMO. If it's a lab, then it doesn't need to be powered on and running 24/7...



  • 8.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 22, 2023 08:52 AM

    64 GB of ram is not sufficient because when you run a vcenter server it takes most of them . maybe you can use HOL.vmware.com to use existing labs



  • 9.  RE: Building my own lab

    Posted Aug 25, 2023 07:44 PM

    You might consider buying a used server off of ebay, I've gone through numerous labs over the years. Currently I'm running vmware workstation on a 2 proc server with half a terabyte of ddr 4 and a few tb of ssd's and 8tb of sas. Install windows server eval, good for 6 months, install vmware workstation on it, then nest everything under it. You also almost always get 4 nics (10g in mine) and often will get other nice addons just because you're buying used datacenter gear. For the price of a couple pieces of the gear you mentioned, you can have the whole lab...plus you can tinker with actual hardware

     

    P.S., you might even be able to swing 2 of them, then put esx on both and use a regular computer as your access.