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Enhancements to Hybrid Linked Mode (HLM) in VMC using the new vCenter Cloud Gateway

10.04.2018 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

It has been almost a year since VMware introduced the Hybrid Linked Mode (HLM) capability, which provides customers with a consistent operating experience for managing and consuming resources from both their on-premises and VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC) environments. Feedback from customers on HLM has been fantastic, especially when new or prospective VMC customers learn about HLM for the very first time. Customers were pleasantly surprised at how seamless the experience was when consuming VMC resources, using a familiar interface, the vSphere UI.

Here is a quick recap of what HLM provides today:

  • HLM allows customers to link a single VMC instance to a single on-prem SSO Domain which can contain one or more vCenter Servers (Enhanced Linked Mode) while maintaining separate administrative domains (e.g. on-prem user is Administrator while VMC user is CloudAdmin only)
  • SSO Domains will be different between on-prem and VMC, however it is a 1:1 relationship
  • A trust is established where the on-prem vCenter Server trusts the incoming connections from VMC as they share the same Active Directory identity source. Data is sync'ed uni-directionally from on-prem to VMC
  • Can be configured at any point in the on-prem vCenter Server lifecycle, no restrictions to initial install and can easily be un-linked unlike ELM
  • Both Embedded & External vCenter Server deployments are supported
  • HLM supports different versions of vCenter Server between on-prem (6.5d+) and VMC, especially as VMC will almost always run a newer version of vSphere
  • Users MUST login to VMC vCenter Server for single-pane of glass management (H5 Client supported only), logging into on-prem vCenter Server will NOT show VMC vCenter Server
  • Roles are NOT replicated due to the restrictive access model in VMC

[Read more...]

Categories // VMware Cloud on AWS, vSphere 6.5, vSphere 6.7, vSphere Web Client Tags // ELM, Enhanced Linked Mode, HLM, Hybrid Linked Mode, vCenter Cloud Gateway, vcg, VMware Cloud on AWS

Nested ESXi on VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC)

09.28.2018 by William Lam // 5 Comments

I have had a few folks ask about Nested ESXi support on VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC), so lets get that out of the way first. Nested ESXi is NOT supported by VMware on any of our platforms, whether that is an on-premises or a cloud environment like VMC or any 3rd party vendors that maybe using VMware software. For those wanting an "official" statement on Nested ESXi support, you can refer to KB 2009916.

UPDATE (02/10/20) - Updated my Automated vSphere Lab Deployment Script to support "basic" Nested vSphere environment running on VMC.

Was asked if it was possible to setup a “basic” Nested vSphere environment for Automation/API testing running in #VMWonAWS

Just updated my Automated vSphere Deployment Lab Script https://t.co/50tJmcDcH2 to enable support for #VMC 😊 pic.twitter.com/n0SeNIaJm8

— William Lam (@lamw.bsky.social | @*protected email*) (@lamw) February 10, 2020

Now, we all know Nested ESXi works and it runs extremely well on vSphere. In fact, vSphere is the best platform for running any Hypervisor in a VM. This is also true for VMC, you can run a Nested ESXi VM in an SDDC, however there are some caveats compared to what you would experience in an on-prem environment. Below are some of the caveats to be aware of if you are considering running Nested ESXi on VMC.


[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi, Nested Virtualization, Not Supported, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // Nested ESXi, nested virtualization, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS

Automating new Cloud Motion with vSphere Replication using Hybrid Cloud Extension (HCX) API

09.25.2018 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

Cloud Motion with vSphere Replication is the newest migration type that has been added to the Hybrid Cloud Extension (HCX) solution, which was also demonstrated during the VMworld US 2018 keynote (watch here). Unlike the traditional Bulk Migration, which also uses vSphere Replication to perform the initial replication, Cloud Motion with VR does not incur any downtime during the VM switch over. This is possible with our most beloved vSphere feature, vMotion!

With Bulk Migration, the VM on the source vCenter Server must be shutdown before the newly replicated VM on the destination vCenter Server can be powered on or else a network conflict will occur. Using Cloud Motion with VR, the VM is simply vMotion'ed from the source vCenter Server to the destination vCenter Server and because the VM's storage has already been replicated, the only thing that needs to transfer is the memory state of the VM.


All three HCX Migration Types can be scheduled from the HCX UI using the vSphere Client or automated using the HCX API. The latter option is definitely ideal for customers with large number of migrations but it can also help with smaller migrations as it reduces the amount of user input required when using the UI and ultimately, this reduces user errors.

To help demonstrate the HCX Migration APIs, I have updated my VMware HCX PowerShell Module to include the following two new functions:

  • New-HcxMigration
  • Get-HcxMigration

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, HCX, PowerCLI, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // bulk migration, Cloud Motion, HCX, Hybrid Cloud Extension, PowerCLI, vmotion

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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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