European Windows 2012 Hosting BLOG

BLOG about Windows 2012 Hosting and SQL 2012 Hosting - Dedicated to European Windows Hosting Customer

European Windows 2012 Hosting - Amsterdam :: Creating Storage Pool Windows Server 2012

clock August 15, 2013 07:58 by author Scott

Storage Spaces, the Windows Server 2012 storage subsystem, is a storage virtualization platform that allows fast and easy provisioning of storage pools, and the virtual hard disks that they host.

This article provides an in depth look at how to create a storage pool on Windows Server 2012, using both the PowerShell Cmdlets and the Storage Manager GUI tools.

Before you can create a storage pool on your Windows Server 2012 computer, you need to add some storage to it. This can be either SAS or SATA drives, installed either internally or externally, such as a JBOD or a SAN array.

Here are the steps to create a storage pool from the Management GUI

1. Open Server Manager, then select “File and Storage Services.”

2. Select “Storage Pools” from the left side menu.

Then select “New Storage Pool” from the Tasks actions list.

3. Click Next on the “Before you begin” dialog.

4. Name your storage pool.

5. Select physical drives to add to the storage pool.

6. Click “Create” on the confirmation dialog box. If you want to create a Virtual Disk immediately, there is a checkbox to bring up the New Virtual Disk wizard on the results screen. Click “Close” to complete the storage pool.

Now, the next step we need to create a storage pool with powershell

As seen in the management GUI, there is not much information that is required to create a storage pool.

The three things that are required are:

1. The storage pool name
2. Which disks to use to create the pool
3. The storage subsystem (Storage Spaces)

The cmdlet we use to create the storage pool is New-StoragePool. While the only three things that are required are name, disks, and subsystem, New-StoragePool also provides some other more advanced features.

The name of the storage pool will be passed through the “FriendlyName” parameter.

The disks to create the storage pool on will be passed into the New-StoragePool in the “PhysicalDisks” parameter. Which disks are available is found by using the Get-PhysicalDisk cmdlet, and can be made even easier using the “-IsPooled” parameter (which will either provide all of the disks that are already pooled, or if set to false will return all of the disks not already in a pool. The Get-PhysicalDisk cmdlet can be run as part of the –PhysicalDisk parameter, or can be run previously and the results stored in a variable. If creating a script that will be reused, it’s advisable to use a variable, so that it is easier to read and understand.

“#Inline, as typed in at the console (incomplete – it would still need the storage subsystem)

New-StoragePool –PhysicalDisk (Get-PhysicalDisk –IsPooled $false) –FriendlyName “Pool1”

#Easier to read and understand in a saved script

$disks = Get-PhysicalDisk –IsPooled $false

New-StoragePool –PhysicalDisk $disks –FriendlyName “Pool1”

The storage subsystem in this case is looking for the “Storage Spaces” instance of storage subsystem. It is returned in the Get-StorageSubsystem cmdlet. In the New-StoragePool cmdlet, it is passed in as either the unique ID, the name, or the friendly name of the subsystem. For simplicity, it is helpful that New-StoragePool accepts the storage subsystem to create the storage pool on through the pipeline.

#This uses the $env:computername environment variable to provide the Storage Spaces subsystem.
#If only one subsystem is installed on the system

$Disks = Get-PhysicalDisk –IsPooled $false

Get-StorageSubsystem –FriendlyName “Storage Spaces on$env:computername” | `

New-StoragePool –Friendlyname “Pool1” –PhysicalDisk $Disks

That is everything that is needed to create a basic storage pool. However, these optional parameters for New-StoragePool may provide some benefit.

ResiliencySettingsNameDefault – specify the default resiliency on new Storage Spaces created on the storage pool.
ProvisioningTypeDefault – specify the default provisioning type for new Storage Spaces created on the storage pool.
IsEnclosureAware – Used if the enclosure containing the disks supports SCSI Enclosure Services. SCSI Enclosure Services provides extra information such as slot location, and LEDs on the enclosure.

To take advantage of Storage Spaces, the storage virtualization technology in Windows Server 2012, you first need to add storage to your server. Once the storage has been added, it needs to be grouped together in storage pools. The storage pools are used to store the virtual hard drives on them.

Create Storage Pools with the Management GUI and PowerShell

Storage pools can be created either through the management GUI or through PowerShell. The management GUI is easier if you are not familiar with the commands used to create storage pools. However, once familiar with the commands, PowerShell becomes easier and faster to create storage pools.

To use the management GUI for creating storage pools, you access "Storage and File Services" from Server Manager. From there, you can access the storage pools, and can take actions on them such as create new storage pools, delete storage pools, or rename them. There are fewer options available for creating storage pools from the management GUI. For example, you cannot specify the default VHD provisioning type on the storage pool when it’s created with the management GUI.

To use PowerShell for creating the storage pools, you need to use three cmdlets:

- First, you need to get the storage subsystem using the get-storagesubsystem cmdlet.
- Second, you need to find the disks you will use to create the storage pool using the get-physicaldisk cmdlet.
- Finally, you will use the storage subsystem and the physical disks together as parameters in the new-storagepool cmdlet.

You can use more options for creating the storage pools by using PowerShell, and you can also save the script to use on multiple systems if needed.

Now that you've added the storage pools to your Windows Server 2012, you'll be ready to add storage spaces onto them and you'll officially be using storage virtualization!



HostForLIFE.eu now supports Windows Server 2012 Hosting Platform in European Data Center

clock October 1, 2012 07:58 by author Scott

Microsoft has just officially released the highly anticipated Windows Server 2012. The newly released server operating system offers a number of features that can be utilized to benefit developers, resellers and businesses. As a premier European Windows and ASP.NET hosting provider that follow the developments of Microsoft products, HostForLIFE.eu proudly announces the support of Windows Server 2012 Hosting Platform in the world-class Amsterdam (The Netherlands) data center.

“We know that our customers are always looking for new technologies and the latest Microsoft product. With the launch of Windows Server 2012, we believe that anyone can take advantage of all the improvements available in this platform”, said Manager of HostForLIFE.eu, Kevin Joseph. “The focus on high availability, scalability, and virtualization has made this one of the most important releases of Windows Server to date. We have been working closely with Microsoft throughout the pre-release development cycle of the platform to both drive the direction of the product and ensure our team is ready to support Server 2012 solutions. We couldn’t be more excited and confident in the solutions now available to our clients with Windows Server 2012.”


With our Windows Server 2012 Hosting Platform, customers have an access directly to all the newest technologies and frameworks, such as ASP.NET 4.5 Hosting, ASP.NET MVC 4 Hosting, Silverlight 5 Hosting, WebMatrix Hosting, Visual Studio Lightswitch Hosting and SQL 2012 Hosting. All these technologies/frameworks are integrated properly on our world-class Control Panel. The package is offered from just €2.45/month and we believe that this is the most affordable, features-rich Windows and ASP.NET Hosting package in European market.


HostForLIFE.eu is awarded Top No#1 SPOTLIGHT Recommended Hosting Partner by Microsoft (see
http://www.microsoft.com/web/hosting/HostingProvider/Details/953). Our service is ranked the highest top #1 spot in several European countries, such as: Germany, Italy, Netherlands, France, Belgium, United Kingdom, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and other European countries. Besides this award, we have also won several awards from reputable organizations in the hosting industry and the detail can be found on our official website.

For more information about our service, please visit
http://www.hostforlife.eu.

About HostForLIFE.eu:


HostForLIFE.eu is European Windows Hosting Provider which focuses on Windows Platform only. We deliver on-demand hosting solutions including Shared hosting, Reseller Hosting, Cloud Hosting, Dedicated Servers, and IT as a Service for companies of all sizes.


Our number one goal is constant uptime. Our data center uses cutting edge technology, processes, and equipment. We have one of the best up time reputations in the industry.


Our second goal is providing excellent customer service. Our technical management structure is headed by professionals who have been in the industry since its inception. We have customers from around the globe, spread across every continent. We serve the hosting needs of the business and professional, government and nonprofit, entertainment and personal use market segments.

 



European Windows 2012 Hosting - Amsterdam :: New features in Windows 2012

clock September 11, 2012 10:22 by author Scott

With Windows Server 2012 (formerly “Windows Server 8”) on the horizon and many IT shops mulling upgrades, it’s more likely upgrades to Server 2012 will be incremental rather than all-at-once. It’s likely that those with infrastructure built on top of Windows Server will have both Server 2012 and older versions of Server running side-by-side for some time.

Given that, here are a few answers to common questions in this area how the new and older versions of Windows Server might have coexistence issues.


Can I run Windows Server 2012 systems in a cluster with earlier versions of Windows Server?

The small answer is “no.” There are several reasons for this, not least of which are the major improvements in the way clustering is managed and deployed across servers in Windows Server 2012. The new clustering features aren’t backward-compatible with earlier versions of Windows Server, so clusters can’t be upgraded in a “rolling” fashion; each node in a cluster has to be evicted from the cluster, upgraded to Windows Server 2012 and added to a total new cluster of 2012-only servers.

Here are some of the key new clustering features in Windows Server 2012, which will not be supported by earlier versions of the operating system:

Storage migration
. This allows cluster-managed VMs to be live-migrated to a new place while the VM is up and running, in much the same manner as VMware’s vMotion.

Clustered shared volumes
. This feature is not new to Server 2012 — it was introduced in Windows Server 2008 R2 — but it’s been revised and expanded, and the expanded functionality is not available for previous versions of Server. Multiple nodes in the same cluster can share the same file system, which allows a VM hosted on any node in that cluster to be migrated to any other node on that cluster.

Cluster-aware updating (CAU)
. Updates to machines in a Windows Server 2012 cluster can be applied automatically in a rolling fashion. This way, the total cluster remains online during the process. Plugins that talk to an API expand CAU’s behavior.

There are many other new features, but to use them uniformly across a cluster requires a cluster-wide upgrade to Windows Server 2012.


What do I need to know in this area using file shares between Windows Server 2012 and earlier versions of Windows Server?

Windows Server 2012 uses the new SMB 3.0 protocol (originally SMB 2.2) for establishing file shares between Windows systems.


SMB 3.0 clients will always attempt to negotiate the highest possible level of the protocol with any peer it connects with, so if you establish a share between Windows Server 2012 and earlier versions of Windows Server, the connection will be negotiated according to whatever level of SMB is available on the other server. Microsoft TechNet blogger Jose Barreto has a post with a chart that spells out the highest grade of SMB available to a connection negotiated between any two editions of Windows.

SMB 3.0′s new features are only available to other Windows Server 2012 or Windows 8 systems. Some of the new features include:

Scale-out
. The same folder can be shared from multiple nodes in a cluster for the sake of failover, surpass use of bandwidth, dynamic capacity scaling, load balancing and fault tolerance.

Multichannel help
. Any multiple, redundant network associations between SMB peers can be used to accelerate the connection.

End-to-end encryption
. Data sent between SMB 3.0 peers is encrypted by default.

VSS help
. SMB shares are now covered by volume shadow copies as well, so data on file shares can also be backed up and restored owing to any VSS-aware software.

SMB Direct
. Servers that use RDMA-capable network adapters can delight in high-speed memory-to-memory data transfers with far less CPU usage and latency than conventional copy operations.

SMB index leasing
. This feature reduces latency for documents accessed via the Branch Cache feature, by locally caching more of the metadata associated with the document and reducing the amount of roundtrips to the original server.

Note that if you have a mixed infrastructure where all the clients and servers use SMB 2 or surpass — Windows Vista on the client side, Windows Server 2008 on the server side — disable the use of SMB 1.x with the PowerShell command Set-SmbServerConfiguration –EnableSMB1Protocol $fake. Disabling SMB 1.x reduces the potential attack surface for the server. If the protocol isn’t in use, it’s best to disable it to preclude a possible future exploit from being used on it.

What Windows Server features are being deprecated in Windows Server 2012?

Some features in Windows Server are no longer supported as of Windows Server 2012, or are in the process of being removed. Most of these deprecations only occupy code or applications that run directly on the new OS, rather than interoperations with other editions. That said, there are exceptions especially if, for instance, you have an older application that expects the same behavior when it tries to interoperate with the newer version of Server.

Here’s a list of some of the major deprecations and feature removals in Windows Server 2012 (with more listed at TechNet), which may impact cross-server compatibility or applications running on other servers:

Clustering
. 32-bit cluster resource DLLs are being deprecated and must be replaced with their 64-bit counterparts whenever possible. Also, if you have any programs that use the Cluster Automation Server (MSClus) COM API, be aware that this API is now only available via an optional component named FailoverCluster-AutomationServer, which isn’t installed by default.

Databases
. 16- and 32-bit ODBC help has been removed, as have ODBC and OLEDB drivers for Oracle and Jet Red databases. (Use vendor-supplied database connectors.) ODBC/OLEDB help is also being canned for any versions of SQL Server beyond 2000; for those editions of SQL Server and higher, use SQL Native Client instead. Finally, no version of SQL Server earlier than 7.0 is supported at all. It’s unlikely that anyone is still running SQL Server 6.5 or earlier, but any attempts to connect to a SQL Server 6.5 (or earlier) instance from Windows Server 2012 will breed an error.

Committed Index
. Help for resource groups and using Committed Index Lightweight Index Services as an certification store have been deprecated.

UNIX
. Many UNIX subsystem features are being deprecated or removed. Microsoft entire SUA POSIX subsystem is being deprecated, along with the line printer daemon protocol that is often used by UNIX clients. As a general replacement for Microsoft’s UNIX features consider using the Cygwin or MinGW, open source tools and APIs that are maintained entirely apart from Windows’s own evolution.

WMI
. Many individual WMI providers are being removed or deprecated: SNMP (because SNMP itself is deprecated); the WMI provider for Committed Index (eclipsed by PowerShell), and the Win32_ServerFeature API.

Finally, the Windows Help application (winhlp32.exe) has also been removed although it has not shipped with Windows Server since Windows Server 2008. What’s more, no add-on version of the Windows Help program is being supplied owing to Microsoft as a download, as it did with previous versions of Windows that mislaid Windows Help. (Even if, a Windows Help journal for the client journal of Windows 8 will be made available later, which must do the job.)

 



About HostForLIFE.eu

HostForLIFE.eu is European Windows Hosting Provider which focuses on Windows Platform only. We deliver on-demand hosting solutions including Shared hosting, Reseller Hosting, Cloud Hosting, Dedicated Servers, and IT as a Service for companies of all sizes.

We have offered the latest Windows 2016 Hosting, ASP.NET Core 2.2.1 Hosting, ASP.NET MVC 6 Hosting and SQL 2017 Hosting.


Tag cloud

Sign in