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Deploying a vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) in VMC-A?

05.07.2019 by William Lam // 2 Comments

During the VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC-A) Customer Summit last week, I received an interesting question from one of our field folks on whether it was possible to deploy a vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) to VMC-A for testing purposes? This was not a use case I had heard of before but it would enable the team to quickly prototype a solution to demonstrate to their customer.

I figured this should work and you should be able to just point the VCSA Installer to an existing VMC-A environment for deployment. It was mentioned that they had attempted to run the installer but ran into a permission issue where it required a full administrator role, which in VMC-A, customers do not have.

In taking a look for myself in one of my VMC-A environment using the VCSA UI Installer, I did indeed run into the same permission issue as shown in the screenshot below.

User has no administrative privileges


This surprised me as the VCSA Installer does not actually require administrative privileges to deploy a VCSA, just the privileges for deploying a regular VM. I captured the logs and screenshots and have shared this with the VCSA PM for further investigation.

UPDATE (01/01/2023) - The workaround shared here is also officially documented in this VMware KB 90922 and deploying VCSA within VMC-A vCenter Server to manage external ESXi hosts such as those residing in an external datacenter or edge location is fully supported by VMware. At the end of the day, VCSA is just another workload running in VMC-A

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VCSA, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // VCSA, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS

New Thunderbolt 3 to 10GbE options for ESXi

04.17.2019 by William Lam // 78 Comments

With the help from Aquantia, we now have an ESXi driver to enable the built-in 10GbE adaptor for both the Apple 2018 Mac Mini and the iMac Pro. Although this was exciting news for our VMware/Apple customers, I was actually more excited for what this development meant for the larger VMware Community when it comes to 10GbE accessibility.

Many Enterprise customers have already been using Thunderbolt 2/3 to access their 10 Gigabit infrastructure, usually over SFP+ but Ethernet based options also exists such as the Sonnet solution which I had shared last year. This is especially common for VMware customers who virtualize Apple MacOS on vSphere for MacOS/iOS development and the use of Thunderbolt enables ESXi to connect to the underlying storage and networking infrastructure, which traditionally has been either Fibre Channel and/or IP-based storage running over a 10Gig link.

When you start looking at 10GbE accessibility for VMware home labs which could potentially apply to remote office/branch office (ROBO) and Edge/IoT environments, the cost and the complexity of the setup is something that many folks have to consider. There are definitely some creative options out there, most recently Chad Moon shared his solution using a Thunderbolt 3 to PCIe expansion chassis with his Intel NUCs which will run you about $230 per setup or you can be a true hardware hacker like Jack Harvest and use one of the M.2 slots in the Intel Skull Canyon NUC and connect that to PCIe 10GbE SFP+ card with a custom 3D printed chassis to hide everything for just $43.68 🙂

[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi, Home Lab, NSX, VSAN, vSphere Tags // 10GbE, Akitio, Aquantia, OWC, QNAP, Sonnet, thunderbolt 3

NSX-T Opaque Networks now supported with Cross vCenter Workload Migration Fling

04.15.2019 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

The Cross vCenter Workload Migration Fling continues to be an extremely powerful tool for our customers and I just love hearing successful customer stories like the one recently shared by Jason on how the tool allowed him to easily migrate over 600 Virtual Machines and with more to come!

Moved 600 and looking at another thousand. Some monster VMs... our test environment moved as easy as vmotion.

— JT (@TheJasonThoms) April 9, 2019

One capability that customers have been asking for is the ability to migrate to and from an NSX-T Opaque Network type, which the current Fling does not support. This has become more and more important as the default NSX stack for VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC) is now NSX-T by default, rather than NSX-V. We are also seeing requests from on-premises customers who have deployed NSX-T for their next generation infrastructure and needing the ability to easily migrate workloads between their old infrastructure that maybe running VSS/VDS or NSX-V backed networks.

With the help from two new colleagues, Vikas Shitole and Rajmani Patel, we are excited to announce the release Cross vCenter Workload Migration v2.6 which now adds support for NSX-T Opaque Networks!

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, NSX, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // Cross vMotion, Fling, NSX-T, Opaque Network, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS

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William is Distinguished Platform Engineering Architect in the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Division at Broadcom. His primary focus is helping customers and partners build, run and operate a modern Private Cloud using the VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) platform.

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