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Creating a VMFS datastore greater than 2TB on a USB device in ESXi

02.04.2022 by William Lam // 12 Comments

I recently had an inquiry from one of our Technical Account Managers (TAM) with an interesting question from their customer. They were looking to manually migrate VMs from one environment to another and because these were isolated and secured environments, they were looking to use an encrypted USB device that would be formatted with VMFS. While researching this topic, they came across several mentions in the community that VMFS on USB has a 2TB limitation, which was not going to work for them.

I personally have never tried nor had the need to ever create a VMFS datastore that was greater than 2TB on a USB device, but I have certainly heard simliar claims in the past and this finally piqued my interests. I reached out to a few folks within VMware Engineering that works on our USB stack and came to learn that is no such limitation when using VMFS on USB. In fact, they also pointed out that some of the reported errors in the community was most likely due to hardware issues rather than capacity of the underlying USB device. This was actually great news and of course I wanted to verify for myself before replying back.

First off, VMFS on USB is NOT officially supported by VMware, so I just want to make sure that is clear. With that said, this is a fairly common practice within the community, especially for VMware Homelabs which I have also demonstrated this capability as early as 2011 and most recently in 2015 for use with vSAN and in 2020 for a vSAN Witness with ESXi on Arm. While most USB storage devices, especially those found in the consumer space are not durable enough for Enterprise usage, it does NOT mean you can not have a reliable USB storage device. I actually wrote about this topic a few years back where you can use inexpensive M.2 enclosures to house an NVMe device that can then be connected via USB/USB-C to have a more reliable storage medium that can also be cost effective.

[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi, Home Lab, vSphere Tags // usb, vmfs

PowerShell community module for Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu

02.03.2022 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

In the previous blog post, we explored the Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu REST API and how it can be used for automation and more advanced workflows. To simplify the consumption of the App Transformer REST API and how I started to explore and learn about the APIs, I created a PowerShell module for App Transformer that implements a number of the App Transformer REST API that can easily be consumed using the following functions:

  • Connect-AppTransformer
  • Get-AppTransformerApplication
  • Get-AppTransformerComponent
  • Get-AppTransformerComponentSignature
  • Get-AppTransformerCredential
  • Get-AppTransformerNetworkInsight
  • Get-AppTransformerVCenter
  • Get-AppTransformerVM
  • New-AppTransformerCredential
  • New-AppTransformerCredentialAssociation
  • New-AppTransformerNetworkInsightCloud
  • New-AppTransformerVCenter
  • Remove-AppTransformerCredential
  • Start-AppTransformerIntrospection


🥳 To help celebrate the official GA of Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu today, I have just published my PowerShell Community Module for App Transformer into the PowerShell Gallery!

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, Cloud Native, PowerCLI, VMware Tanzu, vSphere Tags // Application Transformer, powershell

Getting Started with the Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu REST API

02.02.2022 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

An extremely powerful capability of Application Transformer for VMware Tanzu is not just getting application data and custom information into App Transformer, but that you can also easily extract that information and use that for a number of other scenarios including but not limited to internal true up of your deployed applications versus what is currently in your Change Management Database (CMDB), inventory analysis across your application vendor and/or versions for auditing, licensing and compliance to identifying vulnerable software versions. The use cases for App Transformer certainly span beyond just App Modernization and can truly be endless!


The App Transformer UI is just one way in which users can interact with the solution but for more advanced workflows or automation purposes, users can also leverage the App Transformer REST API. In this blog post, we take a look at how to get started with the App Transformer REST API.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VMware Tanzu, vSphere Tags // Application Transformer, REST API

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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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Recent

  • VMware Flings is now available in Free Downloads of Broadcom Support Portal (BSP) 05/19/2025
  • VMUG Connect 2025 - Minimal VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 5.x in a Box  05/15/2025
  • Programmatically accessing the Broadcom Compatibility Guide (BCG) 05/06/2025
  • Quick Tip - Validating Broadcom Download Token  05/01/2025
  • Supported chipsets for the USB Network Native Driver for ESXi Fling 04/23/2025

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