E2EVC Hamburg 2012 Video Interview

In November 2012 during Experts2Experts Virtualization Conference in Hamburg a couple of fellow MVPs (Aidan Finn  aka @joe_elway, Carsten Rachfahl aka @hypervserver, Thomas Maurer aka  @ThomasMaurer) I delivered a keynote and a master class on Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V. During some down time at the conference we took the time to do some podcast interviews with Florian Klaffenbach form Dell aka @FloKlaffenbach.  We also sat down for a video interview on our beloved subject. Carsten Rachfahl was the interviewer/director and did a great job, for which I’d like to thank him in this post as he’s been doing a bunch of them over the years and it’s nice to see the results of the time he puts into them.

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Subjects include converged networking, migration paths, Cluster Aware Updating and the very capable Windows 8 hypervisor we can now enjoy for free.

Cluster Aware Updating – Cluster CNO Name 15 Characters (NETBIOS name length) GUI Issue

There seems to be a small bug in the Cluster Aware Updating GUI when the cluster name exceeds 15 characters. In our example we’ll look at a cluster with the name XXXCLUSSQLSERVERS or xxxclussqlservers.test.lab. We’ll try to connect to that cluster to do some cluster aware updating.

Click on the dropdown arrow and select our cluster

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Once selected, click “Connect”

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Now we’re greeted by this little message

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No, you didn’t make a typo as you selected the cluster from the drop down list. You also know that your cluster is up and running. So what happened? Well, the GUI queries AD and returns the CNOs it finds. Those are limited to the NETBIOS name and as such maximal 15 characters long. In this case the name is XXXCLUSSQLSERVERS and this gives a CNO of XXXCLUSSQLSERVE, which is not found as a cluster.

The fix is easy and simple. Just type in the cluster name. XXXCLUSSQLSERVERS and voila. You can connect and are on your way.

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Let’s see if the FQDN is accepted as well, shall we? And yes, the below screenshot proves this.

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Conclusion

So this is not a problem once you know this Smile. The CAU GUI returns the cluster CNO name and that’s the NetBIOS name which can be only 15 characters long. Selecting it in CUA to connect to the cluster doesn’t work. You need to fill out the complete name. As we demonstrated the CAU GUI does also accept a FQDN. To prevent running into this issue consider not making your cluster names longer than 15 characters as then the CNO and the cluster name will be identical and is a smart thing to do as you’ll avoid possible duplicate CNOs trying (and failing) to be created or other bugs Winking smile.

In PowerShell you always submit the cluster name so you don’t hit this issue. Perhaps the GUI drop down list could translate the CNOs into the actual cluster names?

System Center 2012 SP1 Available Volume Licensing Service Center

Yes, it’s available … so here we go …

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First thing on the agenda is SCOM 2012 SP1. After that we’ll see If we miss SCVMM 2012 SP1 at that much at all. It’s something we’ll look at for network virtualization, power optimizations & private cloud. We left SCOM/SCVMM behind to get the tremendous value of Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V High Availability clustering and haven’t looked back since. PowerShell filled up any holes we had nicely and we are very happy with what Windows Server 2012 delivers.

Money Saving Hero of 2012: Windows 2012 In Box Deduplication Delivers Big Value

To wave goodbye to 2012 I’m posting the latest screenshot of the easiest and very effective money saving feature you got in Windows Server 2012 than RTM in August. Below you’ll find the status report of a backup LUN in a small environment.  Yes those are real numbers in a production environment.image

If you are not using it; you’re really throwing away vast amounts of money on storage right this moment. If you’re in the market for a practical, economical and effective backup solution my advice you to  is the following. Scrap any backup vendor or product that prevents it files of LUNs being duplicated  by Windows Server 2012.  They might as well be robbing you at gun point.

You can pay for a very nice company new years party with these savingsMartini glassParty smile

I wish you all a great end of 2012 and a magnificent 2013 ahead. In 2013 we’ll push Windows Server 2012 into service where we couldn’t before (waiting for 3 party vendor support and if they keep straggling they are out of the door) and work at making our infrastructure ever more resilient an protected.  With System Center SP1 some products of that suite will make a come back in our environment. 10Gbps is bound to become the standard all over our little data center network and not just our most important workloads.