John Martin looks at combining Availability Groups with a virtualized environment:
Much of the time there is a systems team and a DBA team, and when the DBAs need to build out a new set of SQL Servers, they request X number of virtual servers from the systems team. The servers are handed over and the DBA team works its magic, and then we have our Failover Cluster Instance or Availability Group High Availability solution. But, is it really Highly Available?
The reason I ask is twofold:
- Which physical hosts are your Virtual Machines are located on?
- Which data stores are your virtual disks are located in?
If the answer to either of these questions results in the same answer for any of your Virtual Machines in an Availability Group, or Failover Cluster Instance for that matter. Then you potentially have a massive flaw in your implementation that can affect availability.
The moral of the story is to communicate with the network administrators and SAN folks.