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Enhancements to VMware Tools 12 for Container Application Discovery in vSphere 

03.02.2022 by William Lam // 2 Comments

VMware Tools 12 was just released and it adds a number of new features including support for Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022, Salt Stack Minion deployment and the use of OpenSSL 3.0 library to just name a few.

One additional feature that is quite interesting is the enhancement to the Application Discovery feature that was shipped with VMware Tools 11 which provides organizations with additional visibility of the running processes within a VM.

With VMware Tools 12, we now have a more granular method for discovering container-based processes (Docker or Containerd) running within a Linux VM, which is pretty cool if you ask me!


Similiar to the Application Discovery feature, a new VM guestinfo variable has been introduced called guestinfo.vmtools.containerinfo that will be populated with the list of running containers. By default, the polling interval is every 6 hours with a default of listing the first 100 containers, these and other settings can be adjusted which you can find in the official VMware documentation.

Simliar to the Application Discovery feature, I have also updated my PowerCLI function Get-VMApplicationInfo.ps1 to include this additional functionality for users that would like to extract this information and I have created a new function called Get-VMContainerInfo, which you see how it functions in the screenshot above. In addition to console output, you can also save the information in both CSV and JSON format.

Categories // Kubernetes Tags // container, Kubernetes, vmware tools

Automating the deployment of Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu

01.31.2022 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

I recently wrote about our Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu solution and how it can really benefit IT Admins, beyond just the App Modernization use case which it was primarily designed for. App Transformer is provided as a Virtual Appliance (OVA) and the deployment using the vSphere UI is very straight forward. In this blog post, we will focus on automating the deployment of the App Transformer OVA.

To demonstrate the automation, I have created two example scripts, one that uses PowerCLI and the other using OVFTool. Both scripts contain the exact same variable names that will need to be updated by customers based on their environment. You can find the description for each variable blow covering both the appliance and application settings.

App Transformer Appliance Settings

  • AT_IP - IP Addres
  • AT_NETMASK - Netmask
  • AT_GATEWAY - Gateway
  • AT_DNS - DNS Server
  • AT_DNS_DOMAIN - DNS Search Domain
  • AT_DNS_SEARCH - DNS Search Path
  • AT_NTP - NTP Server
  • AT_ROOT_PASSWORD - Password for root (requires a minimum of 12 characters)

App Transformer Application Settings:

  • AT_USERNAME - Username to login to App Transformer UI
  • AT_PASSWORD - Password to login to App Transformer UI (requires a minimum of 12 characters)
  • AT_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD - Password used to encrypt the database
  • AT_INSTALL_EMBEDDED_HARBOR - Install Embedded Harbor registry, useful for proof of concept/testing purposes

[Read more...]

Categories // Kubernetes, OVFTool, PowerCLI, VMware Tanzu, vSphere Tags // Application Transformer

vSphere Event-Driven Automation using Tanzu Application Platform (TAP) on Tanzu Community Edition

01.28.2022 by William Lam // 2 Comments

Right before the holiday, I had spent some time exploring Tanzu Application Platform (TAP), which also recently GA'ed. TAP provides developers with an application-aware platform that focuses on making the developer experience easy for developing, building and running applications on Kubernetes.


If you are interested in a quick technical deep dive into TAP, check out this video by Scott Sisil, introducing TAP:

One of the core components of TAP is the Cloud Native Runtime (CNR), which is VMware's commercial offering of the popular open source project Knative. The VMware Event Broker Appliance (VEBA) project also makes use of Knative as our backend to provide customers with an event-driven automation solution.

Early on in the VEBA project, we knew that we wanted to develop and innovate with the community in the open but we also understood there would be users who would want an officially supported offering that they can call or file support requests when needed. Early last year, Michael Gasch, the lead architect for VEBA started to port the code from the VMware Event Router, which is the heart of VEBA into CNR's Tanzu Sources for vSphere and start unifying the two code bases. The goal is to ensure that users of the open source project VEBA will also have a consistent user experience in terms of function deployment when using the commercial offering.

As shared back in Dec, I was able to successfully deploy TAP, CNR and Sources for vSphere all running in Tanzu Community Edition (TCE), which is a completely free Enterprise-grade Kubernetes available to anyone in the community to use. For those interested, you can find the instructions below on how to deploy and configure TAP to enable vSphere event-driven automation capabilities for your infrastructure. If you are interested in deploying this using the Tanzu Kubernetes Grid (TKG) Service, check out this other recent blog post that outlines the specific steps.

✅Tanzu Community Edition (TCE) on #VMWonAWS
✅ Tanzu Application Platform
✅ Cloud Native Runtime
✅ Sources for vSphere
✅ VMC vCenter Events via Sockeye
✅ Powershell function to notify via Slack when VM Powered Off (existing #VEBA function)

Will blog details post-holiday! pic.twitter.com/Rhoca951Yj

— William Lam (@lamw.bsky.social | @*protected email*) (@lamw) December 14, 2021

[Read more...]

Categories // Kubernetes, VMware Cloud on AWS, VMware Tanzu, vSphere Tags // Cloud Native Runtime, Tanzu Application Platform, Tanzu Community Edition, VMware Cloud on AWS, VMware Event Broker Appliance

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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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