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Custom vCenter Server Role using vSphere Terraform Provider on VMware Cloud on AWS

06.05.2023 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

In a VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC-A) environment, a default CloudAdmin vCenter Server Role is provided to customers to manage and deploy workloads in vCenter Server. Typically, this vCenter Server Role is only granted to limited number of Cloud Administrators within your organization, which you get to control as an end user.

VMware also supports customers in creating additional custom vCenter Server Roles that limits the privileges for other usage such as auditing or workload provisioning. If you create a custom vCenter Server Role for VM provisioning and you are using vSphere Automation Tools that VMware supports including PowerCLI or even the popular vSphere Terraform Provider, you may come across the following error message during the VM deployment:

System.Read privilege required for config.distributedVirtualSwitch


As you can see from the error message, the current user does not have the Read-only privilege assigned to the Virtual Distributed Switch (VDS) which is required by the automation client, in this case the vSphere Terraform Provider, to be able to properly provisioned a VM.

Note: When using the default CloudAdmin role, VMware automatically applies the correct privileges to all applicable vSphere Inventory objects and this is the reason you do not see this problem when using an account with the default CloudAdmin role. For custom vCenter Server Roles that are created by customers, we can not apply this automation as the intention of the custom role(s) are unknown to VMware.

We can quickly fix this issue by following the instructions below which will guide you in properly assigning the correct vSphere permissions to enable VM provisioning when using a non-CloudAdmin role.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // role, Terraform, VMware Cloud on AWS

Will this Arm SoC work with ESXi-Arm?

06.02.2023 by William Lam // 12 Comments

The number of Arm-based hardware kits has grown significantly in the last couple of years. Today, there are many more options to choose from including different form factors and even hardware from some of the more traditional x86 vendors, which also demonstrates the market opportunity and the demand for Arm-based workloads.

Running ESXi-Arm is definitely a great way to bring all the benefits of the VMware ESXi Hypervisor to your Arm-based workloads including leveraging the powerful vSphere platform by connecting that to an x86 vCenter Server.

As of this publishing this blog post (06/01/23), ESXi-Arm supports over a dozen different hardware platforms that spans Datacenter, Near Edge and Far Edge:

  • Datacenter:
    • Ampere Computing eMAG-based systems from Avantek and Lenovo (HR330A, HR350A)
    • Ampere Computing Altra-based systems from Avantek and other distributors (experimental, single socket only)
    • Ampere Computing Altra-based shapes from Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (experimental)
    • Arm Neoverse N1 System Development Platform
    • HPE ProLiant RL300 Gen11 (experimental)
    • Marvell OCTEON 10 (experimental)
  • Near Edge:
    • SolidRun Honeycomb LX2
    • SolidRun MacchiatoBin or CN9132 EVB
    • NVIDIA Jetson AGX Xavier Developer Kit (experimental)
  • Far Edge:
    • Raspberry Pi 4b - 4GB or 8GB Model
    • Raspberry Pi 400
    • NVIDIA Jetson Xavier NX Developer Kit (experimental)
    • LS1046A-based NXP Freeway
    • LS1046A-based NXP RDB
    • Socionext SynQuacer Developerbox
    • PINE64 Quartz64 Model A
    • Firefly Station M2 (4GB and 8GB models)

If you want to use ESXi-Arm, which is completely free, we definitely recommend looking at this list of Arm hardware kits and you can always find the latest supported Arm-based hardware under the ESXi-Arm Requirements section.

With that said, we continue to see new Arm-based kits and SoCs that are being released on a regular basis and question that I typically see get asked from our customers and field is will this work with ESXi-Arm?

[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi-Arm Tags // Arm

Converting VirtualBox VDI (Virtual Disk Image) to VMDK for use with ESXi 8.x

05.31.2023 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

If you are converting an Oracle VirtualBox VDI (Virtual Disk Image) to a VMDK for use with VMware ESXi, you might come across the following error:

Unsupported or invalid disk type 2 for 'scsi0:0'. Ensure that the disk has been imported


The invalid disk type 2 is typically a giveaway that the VMDK was mostly likely converted to a format that is only understood by a VMware Type 2 Hypervisor (Fusion/Workstation/Player) rather than ESXi which is a VMware Type 1 bare-metal Hypervisor.

Luckily, there is a straight forward way to convert the existing VMDK into the format that ESXi understands!

Note: While VirtualBox does offer an export appliance option which produces an OVA (Open Virtualization Archive), it fails to properly import into a VMware environment 🙁 and hence the need to work directly with the VDI images.

[Read more...]

Categories // ESXi Tags // ESXi 8.0, VirtualBox, vmdk

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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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