Applies To:
Show VersionsBIG-IP AAM
- 13.1.5, 13.1.4, 13.1.3, 13.1.1, 13.1.0
BIG-IP APM
- 13.1.5, 13.1.4, 13.1.3, 13.1.1, 13.1.0
BIG-IP LTM
- 13.1.5, 13.1.4, 13.1.3, 13.1.1, 13.1.0
BIG-IP DNS
- 13.1.5, 13.1.4, 13.1.3, 13.1.1, 13.1.0
BIG-IP ASM
- 13.1.5, 13.1.4, 13.1.3, 13.1.1, 13.1.0
About vCMP application volume management
When you provisioned the vCMP® feature as part of VIPRION® system setup, the BIG-IP® system allocated most of the total disk space to the vCMP application volume (by default, all but 30 gigabytes). Known as the reserve disk space, this 30 gigabytes of disk space is left available for other uses, such as for installing additional versions of the BIG-IP system in the future.
vCMP host administrator tasks
As a vCMP® host administrator, you have the important task of initially planning the amount of total system CPU and memory that you want the vCMP host to allocate to each guest. This decision is based on the resource needs of the particular BIG-IP® modules that guest administrators intend to provision within each guest, as well as the maximum system resource limits for the relevant hardware platform. Thoughtful resource allocation planning prior to creating the guests ensures optimal performance of each guest. Once you have determined the resource allocation requirements for the guests, you are ready to configure the host.
Overall, your primary duties are to create and manage guests, ensuring that the proper system resources are allocated to those guests.
Task summary
Accessing the vCMP host
Performing this task allows you to access the vCMP host. Primary reasons to access the host are to create and manage vCMP® guests, manage virtual disks, and view or manage host and guest properties. You can also view host and guest statistics.
Provisioning the vCMP feature
- On the Main tab, click .
- Verify that all BIG-IP modules are set to None.
- From the vCMP list, select Dedicated.
- Click Update.
Creating a vCMP guest
Before creating a guest on the system:
- Verify that you have configured the base network on the system to create any necessary trunks, as well as VLANs for guests to use when processing application traffic.
- If you plan to enable the Appliance Mode setting for the guest, verify that the vCMP license on the host does not specify appliance mode; if appliance mode is specified in the vCMP license, the feature is applied system-wide to the host and to all guests on the system, instead of on a per-guest basis.
Setting a vCMP guest to the Deployed state
vCMP guest administrator tasks
The primary duties of a vCMP® guest administrator are to provision BIG-IP® modules within the guest and configure any self IP addresses that the guest needs for processing application traffic. The guest administrator must also configure all BIG-IP modules, such as creating virtual servers and load balancing pools within BIG-IP Local Traffic Manager™ (LTM®).
Optionally, a guest administrator who wants a redundant system configuration can create a device group with the peer guests as members.
Provisioning BIG-IP modules within a guest
Creating a self IP address for application traffic
Changing the MTU value on a VLAN (optional)
Do this task when you need to adjust the maximum transmission unit (MTU) size on a VLAN for the vCMP® guest that you are logged into. Changing a VLAN's MTU size can help to optimize application traffic for the guest. You can do this task for either a host-based VLAN or a VLAN that you created from within the guest.
Next steps
After all guests are in the Deployed state, each individual guest administrator can configure the appropriate BIG-IP modules for processing application traffic. For example, a guest administrator can use BIG-IP® Local Traffic Manager™ (LTM®) to create a standard virtual server and a load-balancing pool. Optionally, if guest redundancy is required, a guest administrator can set up device service clustering (DSC®).
Another important task for a guest administrator is to create other guest administrator accounts as needed.
Configuration results
After you and all guest administrators have completed the initial configuration tasks, you should have a system provisioned for vCMP, with one or more guests ready to process application traffic.
When logged in to the vCMP host, you can see the VLANs and trunks configured on the system, as well as all of the guests that you created, along with their virtual disks. You can also see the number of cores that the host allocated to each guest.
When logged in to a guest, the guest administrator can see one or more BIG-IP® modules provisioned and configured within the guest to process application traffic. If the guest administrator configured device service clustering (DSC®), the guest is a member of a device group.