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From the Blogosphere So Many Questions, So Little Time (Part 1)
A request for good questions yields good results. And answers.
By: Kevin Remde
Jan. 13, 2012 01:38 PM
It’s another snowy day up here in Minneapolis, but earlier this week I had the pleasure of traveling down to tropical Kansas City. Overland Park, KS, to be more specific. And on that particular day we decided to try something new. We (John Weston and I) asked our attendees to write down questions, topic areas, off-hand remarks, and comments on slips of paper during the event. What we wanted to do was help facilitate some more discussion during our IT Camp. “IT Camp? What’s that?” Anyway.. the reward for good questions was a T-Shirt. And the result of this ask of our guests was phenomenal. I have sitting here on my desk a pretty nice stack of questions; most of which we were able to answer during the event, but some we didn’t have time to get to. So what I want to do is to put the questions up here on my blog (the ones I can read, anyway.. some of you folks should have been Doctors, because I can’t read your writing!), and then I’ll summarize the answer that we gave, or make up (?!) a new one for you here. Disclaimer: I will provide links to additional information and the sources of my answers, but some of my answers will be opinions and speculation. This is a blog – not a knowledgebase article. You have been warned. --- Here we go with question #1… “Given that differencing disks enable multiple instances of a running OS from a single OS image, please discuss and outline an appropriate best practice patch management strategy.” -David U.
For a more complete description of differencing disks, CLICK HERE. To answer your question, I first need to go back to what I said: the parent disk is never ever modified. This implies that all patching and updates can only happen on the last child in the chain, so updates will always be applied there. So.. a big benefit of differencing disks is in having a common, pre-installed operating system starting point for many running machines that can be created quickly. And the amount of disk space saved initially is enormous, because many machines are sharing a common set of bits for their running installations, while the differencing disk starts out very small and only grows when there are changes. But the downside (besides a slight degradation of performance) is that, eventually, through the natural changes and updates that occur, the differencing (child) disks will be as big or bigger than the parent disk it’s linked to. So how does one approach patch management? You need to (for now, at least) get beyond the desire to patch the parent disk. It’s not possible. It may be someday**, but not at this time. So with that in mind, your best practices around patch management really can’t consider the fact that these machines are running off of a common parent disk; other than the fact that eventually you might want to create a new starting-point, fully patched OS disk to build new children from. **I say this only because it seems like a good idea to add as a feature in the future. I have no knowledge whatsoever on whether this is being planned or created. My recommendations: For production use, however, the limitations long-term out-weigh the benefits. For the sake of performance and simplicity, and even for reducing storage requirements longer-term, I suggest that you don’t use differencing disks for production workloads. Treat your production virtual machines as you would any other physical machine; which includes your patch management practices.
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