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Multiple VCF SSO Identity Providers for VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) Fleet?

10.09.2025 by William Lam // 1 Comment

Most organizations rely on a single Identity Provider (IdP) such as Symantec VIP AuthHub, Okta, Microsoft Entra ID, or PingFederate to provide common identity and access management. However, for some organizations, managing multiple IdPs is just the reality, often due to organizational structure or mergers and acquisitions (M&A).

The new VCF 9.0 Single Sign-On (SSO) has a flexible architecture that can benefit organizations with either a single IdP or multiple IdPs, while still providing the SSO capability. The component that is responsible for providing VCF SSO is called the VCF Identity Broker (vIDB) and it has two deployment models, one of which can aide in the multi-IdP requirement.

VCF SSO is configured on a per-VCF Instance and by leveraging the built-in Embedded vIDB from within the vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA), we can configure VCF SSO using the VCSA within the VCF Management Domain to enable the different IdPs within each VCF Instance as illustrated in the diagram below:


While this may not be a common scenario for most customers, the good news is this just works out of the box without requiring any additional resources to be deployed.

For those with a single IdP and would like VCF SSO across multiple VCF Instances, you can streamline the configuration by deploying a single External vIDB instance which can then be used by multiple VCF Instances as illustrated in the diagram below:


Whether you have organizational requirements that mandate multiple IdPs or you would like to streamline a single IdP deployment, VCF 9.0 can support either or both!

Lastly, for those interested in playing with VCF SSO in a lab environment, but do not have access to an Enterprise IdP, you can check out this blog post using a self-hosted IdP called Keycloak.

Categories // VMware Cloud Foundation Tags // VCF 9.0

Modding an NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada (20GB VRAM) into Minisforum MS-A2

10.08.2025 by William Lam // 5 Comments

The Minisforum MS-A2 has been my go to platform for running an optimized and fully functional VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 9.0 lab environment. From vSAN ESA to NSX VPC to vSphere Kubernetes Service to VCF Automation to Data Services Manager, it runs it all!

Over the past couple of weeks, I had also been experimenting with running VMware Private AI Services (PAIS) using the MS-A2. For those with an eye for detail, may have noticed that the NVIDIA GPU requirement was actually being satisfied by an ASUS NUC 14 Performance, which includes an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 (8GB VRAM). The ASUS NUC was purely for validation and prototyping purposes to ensure that I could actually run PAIS before investing in a more capable and certainly more expensive NVIDIA GPU šŸ¤‘

One of the lesser known capabilities of the MS-A2 is the ability to add a half-height PCIe device and from the very beginning when I had first heard about the MS-A2, my plan and hope was to be able to add an NVIDIA GPU to the system!

[Read more...]

Categories // Private AI Services, VMware Cloud Foundation Tags // Minisforum, VCF 9.0

MS-A2 VCF 9.0 Lab: Deploying Model Endpoint with DirectPath I/O using VMware for Private AI Services (PAIS)

10.07.2025 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

In this final blog post, we will now deploy several AI model endpoints (downloaded from Hugging Face), configure our private data source which can be a shared location (Google Drive, Confluence, Microsoft Sharepoint, or S3-compatible endpoint) or using local filesĀ and then consuming them using an AI Agent that is built using VMware for Private AI Services (PAIS).

As mentioned in the very first blog post of this mini-series, my goal was to get hands experience with PAIS but without the need to have anĀ NVIDIA GPU capable of vGPU, which would also require an NVIDIA AI for Enterprise (NVAIE) license.

Luckily, we can use an NVIDIA GPU via DirectPath I/O, thanks to the backend plumbing the PAIS Engineering team have built and had shared with me 😊

For my proof of concept, I am using an ASUS NUC 14 Performance, which has an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 mobile GPU (8GB VRAM). The ASUS NUC 14 is running alongside my Minisforum MS-A2 setup, is only used to deploy the completions model endpoint. The use of the ASUS NUC 14 is purely for prototyping and experimentation purposes to demonstrate that anyone can play with PAIS within their lab environment. I plan to use a more powerful NVIDIA GPU setup, which I will share more details at a later point for those interested.

References:

  • Running Completion or Embedding Models by Using Model Endpoints
  • Adding Context to Model Responses by Using Knowledge Bases
  • Deploy an Agent for a Generative AI Application

Requirements:

  • VCF Automation (VCFA) Organization configured with Namespace
  • VMware Private AI Services (PAIS) enabled
  • Data Services Manager (DSM) configured with VCFA
  • Authentik IdP configured with OIDC Public Client Application
  • Harbor instance configured for AI model storeĀ 
  • PAIS instance deployed

[Read more...]

Categories // Private AI Services, VMware Cloud Foundation Tags // VCF 9.0

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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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