HP OneView 1.10 Support Matrix

1 Appliance requirements
1.1 Appliance VM and host requirements
HP OneView is a virtual appliance running on the following supported hypervisor hosts.
Table 1 Supported hypervisors and versions
VersionHypervisor
VMware ESXi
5.0
5.0 update 1
5.0 update 2
5.0 update 3
5.1
5.1 update 1
5.1 update 2
5.5
5.5 update 1
Hyper-V is supported on the following Microsoft Windows platforms with the
Hyper-V role installed:
Microsoft Hyper-V
Windows Server 2012
Windows Server 2012 R2
The appliance virtual machine (VM) must run on a VM host with ProLiant G7-class CPUs or later.
The appliance VM requires the following:
Two 2 GHz or greater virtual CPUs.
10 GB of memory dedicated to the appliance.
160 GB of thick-provisioned disk space.
A connection to the management LAN. HP recommends that you have separate networks for
management and data.
In addition, the clock on the VM host must be set to the correct time. If NTP (Network Time Protocol)
is not used to synchronize the time on the VM host, HP recommends configuring the appliance to
use NTP directly.
1.1.1 Where to create the virtual machine
HP recommends that you do not run the virtual appliance on a host that is to be managed by the
same appliance instance.
IMPORTANT: When running HP OneView on a blade server hypervisor host in an HP BladeSystem
enclosure, do not manage that enclosure with HP OneView. You can, however, select a hypervisor
host system located on an HP ProLiant DL rack mount server that you plan to manage with HP
OneView.
1.1.2 Planning for high availability
To use HP OneView in an HA (high availability) configuration, see the hypervisor documentation
for specific requirements.
ESXi http://www.vmware.com/products/datacenter-virtualization/vsphere/
high-availability.html
Hyper-V http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc753787.aspx
1.1 Appliance VM and host requirements 5