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Will I get Photon OS when I upgrade my VCSA 5.5/6.0 to VCSA 6.5?

11.04.2016 by William Lam // 7 Comments

upgrade-vcsa-55-60-to-vcsa65
There seems to be a bit of confusion on how the upgrade from an existing vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) 5.5/6.0 to the upcoming VCSA 6.5 release will work. I suspect part of the confusion is also due to the fact that the underlying OS in the VCSA in vSphere 6.5 is changing from SLES to VMware's very own Photon OS. Before going into the upgrade details, I do want to mention that with this change, VMware will now own the entire software stack within the VCSA (OS + Application). This will allow VMware to quickly respond and deliver OS and security updates to customers at a much quicker rate than it was possible before. In addition, Photon OS is also a very optimized Linux distribution which has allowed VMware to significantly improve the reboot and startup time of the vCenter Server application. To be clear, the vCenter Server application itself is NOT running as a Docker Container nor are there any other application or services within the VCSA that is running a Docker Container, I know this was something folks were also assuming because the OS changed to Photon OS.

Now going back to the upgrade question, how would an upgrade work if the underlying OS is changing? The answer is actually quite simple. VCSA upgrades are "Migration" based upgrades and has been since the very first release of the VCSA in vSphere 5.0.

So how does it work? Here is the high level workflow:

  1. The new VCSA 6.5 is deployed using the standard VCSA UI or CLI installer using the "Upgrade" option. It does require a temporarily IP Address (DHCP or Static)
  2. The VCSA 6.5 then connects to the existing VCSA 5.5/6.0 and starts copying (migrate) the data from the old VCS to the new VCSA
  3. The existing VCSA 5.5/6.0 is then shutdown, the new VCSA 6.5 now takes over the personality of the original VCSA and you have now successfully upgraded

As you can see from this workflow, your existing VCSA is not actually being upgraded but rather its data is migrated over to the new VCSA. Once the upgrade has completed, you will now be on the new Photon OS based VCSA. Hopefully this clears up any confusion 🙂

Lastly, I should also mention that in vSphere 6.5, we have an updated version of the VCSA Migration Tool simliar to the one release with vSphere 6.0 Update 2m. It will now support migrating from a Windows-based vCenter Server running either vSphere 5.5 or vSphere 6.0 to VCSA 6.5.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // vcenter server appliance, VCSA, vcva, vSphere 5.5, vSphere 6.0, vSphere 6.5

New vSphere 6.5 APIs worth checking out

11.03.2016 by William Lam // 11 Comments

With the upcoming new release of vSphere, there are quite a few new vSphere APIs to look forward to and consume from an Automation standpoint. Similiar to what I had done in the past with previous major releases of vSphere, here is a list of of some of the new vSphere APIs (SOAP based) that I think are worth checking out whether they are new features vSphere 6.5 will introduced or new enhancements to existing functionality which will benefit our vSphere Administrators and/or Developers.

If you would like to see the complete list of new vSphere 6.5 (SOAP based) APIs, be sure to check out the vSphere 6.5 API Reference Guide which will include a "What's New" section on all the new Managed Objects, Methods, Properties, etc. when vSphere 6.5 is generally available.

CryptoManager / CryptoManagerKmip - VM Encryption is one of the new features in vSphere 6.5 and with these APIs, you will be able to manage and configure the VM Encryption settings including associating with KMIP server. For enabling/disabling VM Encryption at the VM and disk level, have a look at VirtualMachine->crypto and VirtualMachine->deviceChange->backing property.

  • GenerateClientCsr
  • GenerateKey
  • GenerateSelfSignedClientCert
  • ListKmipServers
  • MarkDefault
  • RegisterKmipServer
  • RemoveKmipServer
  • RetrieveClientCert
  • RetrieveClientCsr
  • RetrieveKmipServerCert
  • RetrieveKmipServersStatus_Task
  • RetrieveSelfSignedClientCert
  • UpdateKmipServer
  • UpdateKmsSignedCsrClientCert
  • UpdateSelfSignedClientCert
  • UploadClientCert
  • UploadKmipServerCert

FailoverClusterConfigurator - To setup the new vCenter Server High Availability (VCHA) feature which is only available in the VCSA, use these APIs which include deploying and configuring the passive and witness nodes.

  • configureVcha_Task
  • createPassiveNode_Task
  • createWitnessNode_Task
  • deployVcha_Task
  • destroyVcha_Task
  • getVchaConfig
  • prepareVcha_Task

FailoverClusterManager -  Have a look at these APIs to initiate a failover or view the current VCHA configuration.

  • getClusterMode
  • GetVchaClusterHealth
  • initiateFailover_Task
  • setClusterMode_Task

HostVStorageObjectManager - An API only feature in vSphere 6.5 which will allow you to create and manage Virtual Disks as a "First Class" citizen. This particular API is for managing First Class Disks (FCD) when talking directly to an ESXi host.

  • HostCloneVStorageObject_Task
  • HostCreateDisk_Task
  • HostDeleteVStorageObject_Task
  • HostExtendDisk_Task
  • HostInflateDisk_Task
  • HostListVStorageObject
  • HostReconcileDatastoreInventory_Task
  • HostRegisterDisk
  • HostRelocateVStorageObject_Task
  • HostRenameVStorageObject
  • HostRetrieveVStorageObject
  • HostRetrieveVStorageObjectState
  • HostScheduleReconcileDatastoreInventory

VcenterVStorageObjectManager - An API only feature in vSphere 6.5 which will allow you to create and manage Virtual Disks as a "First Class" citizen. This particular API is for managing First Class Disks (FCD) when talking directly to a vCenter Server.

  • AttachTagToVStorageObject
  • CloneVStorageObject_Task
  • CreateDisk_Task
  • DeleteVStorageObject_Task
  • DetachTagFromVStorageObject
  • ExtendDisk_Task
  • InflateDisk_Task
  • ListTagsAttachedToVStorageObject
  • ListVStorageObject
  • ListVStorageObjectsAttachedToTag
  • ReconcileDatastoreInventory_Task
  • RegisterDisk
  • RelocateVStorageObject_Task
  • RenameVStorageObject
  • RetrieveVStorageObject
  • RetrieveVStorageObjectState
  • ScheduleReconcileDatastoreInventory

DatastoreNamespaceManager->ConvertNamespacePathToUuidPath() - From a troubleshooting standpoint, do you ever wish you can easily translate the human readable VM path (e.g. /vmfs/volumes/vsanDatastore/myVM/myVM.vmx to the VSAN/VVOL equivalent identifier which is UUID based? Well, this is now possible with this new API!

AuthorizationManager->FetchUserPrivilegeOnEntities() - This is a pretty neat API as it allows you to easily query an existing user to see the current privileges has been assigned. This could could come in handy to quickly audit a particular privilege for a user.

HostImageConfigManager->installDate() - Have a look at this blog post Super easy way of getting ESXi installation date in vSphere 6.5 for more details.

HostImageConfigManager->fetchSoftwarePackages() - This is another nice API to easily retrieve all the VIBs installed on an ESXi host. This is the equilvenet of running "esxcli software vib list" and you will now have all the additional metadata info that was historically only available via ESXCLI. Here is an example PowerCLI function called Get-ESXInstalledVib which exercises this new API.

HostStorageSystem->UpdateVmfsUnmapPriority() - Have a look at the blog post Configure new automatic Space Reclamation (VMFS UNMAP) using vSphere 6.5 APIs for more details.

VirtualMachine->{AttachDisk_Task(),DetachDisk_Task()} - This API allows you to attach and detach First Class Disks that you may have created earlier using the FCD APIs as shown above.

VirtualMachine->config->bootOptions->EfiSecureBootEnabled - To take advantage of the new VM Secure Boot feature in vSphere 6.5, you simply just toggle this property. Here are two PowerCLI functions called Get-SecureBoot/Set-SecureBoot which exercises this new API.

In addition, vSphere 6.5 also introduces a new REST-based API that covers several areas such as basic VM Lifecycle Management (simliar to that of the existing vSphere SOAP-based API), vSphere Content Library, vSphere Tagging and Virtual Appliance Management for the vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA). You can interact with these new APIs by using any of the vSphere Automation SDKs (.Net, Java, Python, Ruby or Perl) or even just simply using cURL from the command-line. It is really that easy!

Lastly, to make exploring these new REST-based APIs easier for both administrators as well as developers, there is now a new API Explorer that is included specifically with the VCSA in vSphere 6.5. You can think of it like a vSphere MOB 2.0 but way easier to use. Some of you may recognize the interface as shown in the screenshot below which uses the Swagger UI. This interface allows you to quickly browse through all the APIs, no need to refer to the documentation as the APIs are self-documented and made available in this interface. Best of all, you can even try out the APIs by simply logging into your vCenter Server and then selecting an API and clicking on the "Try it out now" button!

To access the API Explorer, you simply open a web browser and enter the following URL: https://[VC-HOSTNAME-OR-IP]/apiexplorer/

vsphere-6-5-apis-apiexplorer
There will also be native PowerCLI cmdlets (Get-CisService) to these new REST API and below is a quick example of retrieving the version (GET /system/version) of the VCSA:

$vcsaVersion = Get-CisService -Name  'com.vmware.appliance.system.version'
$vcsaVersion.get()

vsphere-6-5-apis-powercli

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // API Explorer, PowerCLI, vSphere 6.5, vSphere API, vSphere SDK

Direct playback & download URLs for VMworld EU 2016 sessions

11.01.2016 by William Lam // 5 Comments

I had several folks ping me on when I would be publishing a nice consolidated list of VMworld Europe 2016 breakout sessions like I did for VMworld US. I took a look at the VMworld EU site last night and it looks like only 71 sessions have been published so far. In any case, I worked a bit of magic and was able to generate a list of playback URLs for the published session thus far. You can find the list on my Github repo: https://github.com/lamw/vmworld2016-eu-session-urls

UPDATED (11/01/16) - Just updated Github repo to include direct download URLs, grab them while you can 😀

Note: Similiar to the VMworld US based sessions, Media Site could make further changes which may render the URLs invalid or requiring additional authentication. I will try to update them as they change but so far, they seem to work without any issues 🙂

Categories // Explore Tags // vmworld

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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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