NSX-T 2.4 has NSX Manager and NSX Controller still logically separated but physically integrated within a single virtual appliance which can be clustered as a 3-node management/controller cluster. So the first typical question during NSX-T design workshop or before NSX-T implementation is what NSX-T Manager appliance size is good for my environment.
In NSX-T 2.4 documentation (NSX Manager VM System Requirements) are documented following NSX Manager Appliance sizes.
In the above documentation section is written that
Hope this helps to your NSX-T Plan, Design, and Implement exercise.
In NSX-T 2.4 documentation (NSX Manager VM System Requirements) are documented following NSX Manager Appliance sizes.
Appliance Size |
Memory
|
vCPU
|
Disk Space
|
VM Hardware Version
|
---|---|---|---|---|
NSX Manager Extra Small
|
8 GB
|
2
|
200 GB
|
10 or later
|
NSX Manager Small VM
|
16 GB
|
4
|
200 GB
|
10 or later
|
NSX Manager Medium VM
|
24 GB
|
6
|
200 GB
|
10 or later
|
NSX Manager Large VM
|
48 GB
|
12
|
200 GB
|
10 or later
|
- The NSX Manager Extra Small VM resource requirements apply only to the Cloud Service Manager.
- The NSX Manager Small VM appliance size is suitable for lab and proof-of-concept deployments.
So for NSX-T on-prem production usage, you can use Medium and Large size. But which one? The NSX-T documentation section (NSX Manager VM System Requirements) has no more info to support your design or implementation decision. However, in another part of the documentation (Overview of NSX-T Data Center) is written that
- The NSX Manager Medium appliance is targeted for deployments up to 64 hosts
- The NSX Manager Large appliance for larger-scale environments.