When will CML 2 support clustering?
This was the question we heard most when we released Cisco Modeling Labs (CML) 2.0 - and it was a great one, at that. So, we listened. CML 2.4 now offers a clustering feature for CML-Enterprise and CML-Education licenses, which supports the scaling of a CML 2 deployment horizontally.
But what does that mean? And what exactly is clustering? Read on to learn about the benefits of Cisco Modeling Labs' new clustering feature in CML 2.4, how clustering works, and what we have planned for the future.
When CML is deployed in a cluster, a lab is no longer restricted to the resources of a single computer (the all-in-one controller). Instead, the lab can use resources from multiple servers combined into a single, large bundle of Cisco Modeling Labs infrastructure.
In CML 2.4, CML-Enterprise and CML-Education customers who have migrated to a CML cluster deployment can leverage clustering to runlarger labswith more (or larger) nodes. In other words, a CML instance can now supportmore userswith all their labs. And when combiningmultiple computersand their resources into a single CML instance, users will still have the same seamless experience as before, with the User Interface (UI) remaining the same. There is no need to select what should run where. The CML controller handles it all behind the scenes, transparently!
A CML cluster consists of two types of computers:
During installation, and when multiple network interface cards (NICs) are present in the server, the initial setup script will ask the user to choose which role this server should take: "controller" or "compute." Depending on the role, the person deploying the cluster will enter additional parameters.
For a controller, the important parameters are its hostname and the secret key, which computes will use to register with the controller. Therefore, when installing a compute, the hostname and key parameters serve to establish the cluster relationship with the controller.
Every compute that uses the same cluster network (and knows the controller's name and secret) will then automatically register with that controller as part of the CML cluster.
We have tested clustering with a bare metal cluster of nine UCS systems, totaling over 3.5TB of memory and more than 630 vCPUs. On such a system, the largest single lab we ran (and support) is 320 nodes. This is an artificial limitation enforced by the maximum number of node licenses a system can hold. We currently support CML cluster deployments with one controller and up to eight computes.
While some limitations still exist in this release in terms of features and scalability, remember this is only Phase 1. This means the functionality is there, and future releases promise even more features, such as the:
For more details about CML 2.4, please review the latest release notes or leave a comment or question below. We are happy to help!
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