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I agree. Also, if you run SOFS in VMs on the same servers, then you can also use the servers as Hyper-V hosts, as well as Starwind hosts and SOFS hosts.anton (staff) wrote:My preferred scenario is - StarWind running directly on SoFS servers. If you cannot manage skip using them and cannot install StarWind directly on Hyper-V nodes (w/o any external hardware).
Are you sure that you wont affect anything in any case?run SOFS in VMs on the same servers
dtrounce wrote:I'm not sure. But it seems to work running the SOFS in VMs. The VMs have different IP addresses, and I am assuming that is what matters to avoid loopback.
Having said that, I am finding that traditional iSCSI connections from the Hyper-V hosts to the Starwind HA targets seems to be more reliable than SOFS, which seems to sometimes drop the connection from the Hyper-V hosts to the SOFS VM storage when one of the HA partners goes down for maintenance.
And iSCSI is less complex to set up for a small number of Hyper-V hosts than SOFS. I can see the attraction of SOFS when you have a large number of Hyper-V hosts. Then maybe you have separate physical servers for the SOFS storage and the Hyper-V hosts.
dtrounce wrote:No - these are small test servers, to test reliability, not really performance.
Presumably SOFS might have better performance, as it can leverage SMB3 multi-channel and RDMA, with good IB or 10GbE network adapters. Though you do have round-robin iSCSI.