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Useful vSphere Automation techniques for assisting with CrowdStrike remediation

07.20.2024 by William Lam // 9 Comments

By now, you have probably heard about or have directly been impacted by the recent CrowdStrike software update to Microsoft Windows system causing an unprecedented global outage. I know IT administrators are working around the clock to remediate thousands if not tens of thousands of Windows systems, the current recommended remediation process from CrowdStrike is definitely painful since it requires users to go into Windows safe mode to remove the offending file. To further complex things, most organizations enable Microsoft Bitlocker, which adds additional step to the already painful manual remediation process as you now have to locate your recovery keys before you login to apply the fix.

Within hours of the CrowdStrike news, I already saw a number of inquiries from our customers and field asking if there were any automated solutions or scripts that could aide in their remediation as asking any organization to manually remediate is a non-starter with the scale of deployments for most Enterprises. While getting up to speed on the remediation steps and thinking about how our vSphere platform can help users automate, what is typically a manual task, I had a few ideas that folks might find useful.

Disclaimer: The scripts provided in this article are meant as examples, please test and adapt them based on your own environment as these have not been tested in any official capacity and the behaviors may vary from environment to environment. Please use at your own risk.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, PowerCLI, vSphere 7.0, vSphere 8.0 Tags // CrowdStrike, keystroke

Slick Jonsbo D31 computer case with embedded LCD screen for homelab

07.18.2024 by William Lam // 1 Comment

Last month, I noticed a very interesting DIY (Do it Yourself) computer build from fellow colleague Cyprien Laplace, who you might know from the ESXi-Arm team.


No surprise, the build was for a new ESXi-Arm homelab using an ASRock Ampere Altra (ALTRAD8UD-1L2T) and configured with 64 CPUs and 128GB of memory! 🔥

first boot of my ASRock @AmpereComputing Altra machine! pic.twitter.com/iH1dYHWpWn

— Cypou (@cypou) January 14, 2024

At first, when Cyprien was sharing his build updates on Twitter/X, it looked like a standard DIY project but then several folks noticed he had a pretty unique computer case that included a built-in LCD screen! The classic grey/yellow screen pictured above running ESXi-Arm looks amazing and certainly useful for those wanting to remove the dependency of an external monitor.

If you are in the market for building or upgrading your homelab and want a unique computer case, check out th Jonsbo D31 which comes in both Black or White with two different models:

Black

  • D31 Standard Screen
  • D31 Mesh Screen

White

  • D31 Standard
  • D31 Mesh

Cyprien's ESXi-Arm build also recently won the best homelab community build (#3) project that was sponsored by Newegg and Ampere, so congrats on the W! 🥳🖥️🐈‍⬛

Watch the replay to see who won https://t.co/uBx5uE9uhX pic.twitter.com/Q48gCRlvyc

— Joe Speed (@JoeSpeeds) June 5, 2024

Categories // ESXi, ESXi-Arm, Home Lab Tags // Ampere, Arm, ASRock, homelab

Automating the retrieval & reclamation of VM MAC address blocklist for vCenter Server using the vSphere MOB

07.16.2024 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

As shared in this blog post HERE and HERE, vCenter Server has a built-in mechanism for managing VM MAC addresses where the original VM has been migrated to a different vCenter Server (regardless of the vCenter SSO Domain) using a VM MAC Address blocklist.

The VM MAC address blocklist functionality is still only available using a private API and the only way to find out what VM MAC addresses are currently in the list is by interactively using the vSphere MOB and the fetchRelocatedMACAddress API.

Recently, I had a question from a customer who was looking to clear the VM MAC address blocklist and was wondering if that was possible and whether there was an API to perform this operation?

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, vSphere 7.0, vSphere 8.0 Tags // mac address, vSphere MOB

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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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