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Is vCenter Server & ESXi hosts using VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA) or custom CA certificates?

10.23.2018 by William Lam // 3 Comments

Customers have two primary methods of managing TLS certificates for their ESXi hosts, they can either use the built-in VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA) which is part of vCenter Server or Custom CA Certificates. I will not go into the gory details, but you can read more about the options here in our documentation.

A question that I had received recently was whether you can determine the type of certificate an ESXi host was provisioned with and whether this could be programmatically retrieved using the vSphere API? The answer is yes. In vSphere 6.0, we introduced a CertificateInfo property which contains a number of fields including status, issuer, expiry and subject details and by inspecting either the issuer or subject property, you can determine the type of certificate on the ESXi host.

Here is a screenshot of the data using the vSphere MOB for an ESXi host that has VMCA-based certificate:


Here is a screenshot of the data using the vSphere MOB for an ESXi host that has custom CA certificate:


As you can see, for VMCA-based certificate the issuer's OU will have value of "VMware Engineering" and subject's emailAddress will have value of "*protected email*".

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, ESXi, VCSA, vSphere Tags // expiry, PowerCLI, ssl certificate, TLS, VMCA, VMware Certificate Authority, vSphere

Quick Tip - How to enable vGPU vMotion in vSphere 6.7 Update 1

10.19.2018 by William Lam // 10 Comments

Since this question has come up a few times this week, I thought it is worth a quick blog post on how to enable the new vGPU vMotion feature which is now available in latest vSphere 6.7 Update 1 release. If you try to vMotion a VM that has been configured with a vGPU, you see the following message stating vGPU hot migration is not enabled.

To enable vGPU vMotion, you just need to update the following vCenter Server Advanced Setting vgpu.hotmigrate.enabled to true using the vSphere UI. The change will go into effect immediately and you will now be able to vMotion a VM configured with vGPU. This setting is actually documented in the official vSphere documentation here, but from all the folks I spoke with, it looks like it never came up or it must have been missed.


In addition to vMotion support, you can also perform Storage vMotion & Cross vMotion (Compute & Storage) for vGPU enabled VMs. Make sure that both your vCenter Server and ESXi hosts have been upgraded to vSphere 6.7 Update 1 and that you have NVIDIA GRID hardware and VIB installed on ESXi host. For folks interested in learning more about the new vMotion features in vSphere 6.7 Update 1, be sure to check out the VMworld 2018 session What's New in vMotion Technical Deep Dive.

Lastly, for those that prefer to automate this configuration change, here is a quick PowerCLI snippet for enabling vGPU vMotion:

Get-AdvancedSetting -Entity $global:DefaultVIServer -Name vgpu.hotmigrate.enabled | Set-AdvancedSetting -Value $true -Confirm:$false

Categories // ESXi, vSphere Tags // vGPU, vgpu.hotmigrate.enabled, vmotion, vSphere 6.7 Update 1

All vSphere 6.7 Update 1 release notes & download links

10.16.2018 by William Lam // 10 Comments

The highly anticipated vSphere 6.7 Update has officially GA'ed! Below is an aggregation of all the related release notes and downloads for this vSphere release. I have also created a short URL which you can use to access this exact same page using vmwa.re/vsphere67u1

The downloads are currently being staged, so please be patient.

vCenter Server 6.7u1

  • Release Notes
  • Download

ESXi 6.7u1

  • Release Notes
  • Download

vSAN 6.7u1

  • Release Notes
  • vSAN Witness Download

[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi, OVFTool, PowerCLI, VCSA, VSAN, vSphere 6.7 Tags // vSphere 6.7 Update 1

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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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