I was recently reminded of an old vCenter Server feature called Message of the Day (MOTD) that I had used quite extensively when I was a customer to easily communicate upcoming patch windows, downtime, updates and other interesting news to my internal users. Back in the day, the vSphere UI was known as the VI Client (C# Client or Thick Client) and once the MOTD is configured, users logging in would see this this custom notification banner across their UI Client.
It has been ages since I had used vCenter's MOTD feature but after sharing this tidbit on Twitter yesterday, I found a mix of folks that were still using this awesome feature including a VMware Cloud on AWS use case to that helped them easily identify a particular environments to users who was just learning about this feature for the first time.
Used this in @vmwarecloudaws to easily identify different environments e.g. Sandbox from Production https://t.co/bu2eaGMJw6 pic.twitter.com/6dMNb940Gb
— Mark McGilly (@MarkMcG_Bel) March 17, 2021
In addition to bringing some awareness to this oldie but goodie feature of vCenter Server, I also wanted to share some details on how you might automate this as I had a few questions about this on Twitter.
Here is a screenshot of my vSphere 7.0 Update 2 environment which has been configured with an MOTD and you can see that it can also properly render emojis, so you can certainly have some fun here 🙂
To configure an MOTD, click on the vCenter Server inventory object and then navigate to Configure->Settings->Message of Day and set or disable the message.
For those that wish to configure the MOTD programmatically, you can do so using the vSphere API with your favorite vSphere SDK of your choice including PowerCLI. You will need to use the UpdateServiceMessage() method which is part of the SessionManager object.
If you wish to view or check whether an MOTD is configured, the following PowerCLI snippet can be used:
Get-AdvancedSetting -Entity $global:DefaultVIServer -Name vpxd.motd | select Value
However, to configure the MOTD, you can NOT use the Set-AdvancedSetting cmdlet as the advanced setting is a read only value and you must use the vSphere API directly.
Using PowerCLI, here is how to view the current MOTD:
$sm = Get-View $global:DefaultVIServer.ExtensionData.Content.SessionManager
$sm.Message
Using PowerCLI, here is how to update/change the MOTD:
$motd = "🚨This is William Lam's environment, it is NOT supported. Use at your own risk 😎"
$sm = Get-View $global:DefaultVIServer.ExtensionData.Content.SessionManager
$sm.UpdateServiceMessage($motd)
Steve Ballmer says
Another great article!