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Search Results for: veba

VEBA + Knative + k3s on ESXi-Arm

01.26.2021 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

In response to a customer request to add Arm64 support for our VMware Event Router, I have been spending some more time playing with k3s (lightweight Kubernetes distribution for Arm) running on ESXi-Arm using a Raspberry Pi. Not only was this a good learning experience that exposed to me to the broader Arm ecosystem, which is still maturing but it also took me down several 🐰🕳️ which got me exploring new tools that I had never used before such as Buildpacks and Docker buildx to name a few.

This past weekend, I was finally successful in setting up our VMware Event Router for Arm using the Knative processor on a k3s cluster using ESXi-Arm running on a Raspberry Pi 4b 8GB model! As of writing this, the following versions were used:

  • Knative Serving v0.20.0
  • Knative Net Contour v0.20.0
  • Knative Eventing v0.20.1
  • RabbitMQ Cluster Operator v0.5.0

Made some more progress w/@KnativeProject + @VMWEventBroker on k3s on @esxi_arm

✅ Knative Serving & Eventing
✅ @RabbitMQ Operator & Eventing
✅ @projectcontour
✅ @VMware Event Router

Just need to figure out @buildpacks_io for Arm64 - https://t.co/ChdkMLSXMp looks promising pic.twitter.com/XFWDiGONSB

— William Lam (@lamw.bsky.social | @*protected email*) (@lamw) January 24, 2021

In addition, I was able to also convert the Knative python echo function that was originally created by my colleague Michael Gasch and build an Arm64 version of the Knative python echo function which demonstrates the integration of VEBA with the Knative processor connected to a vCenter Server as my event source.

🥳 Successfully deployed & verified my arm64 python echo func w/@VMWEventBroker (Event Router) using the @KnativeProject processor!

Awesome for lightweight testing/development purposes on small VM w/k3s on @esxi_arm

Heck, don’t even need real vCenter, can run vcsim locally! pic.twitter.com/DuI16fvXfs

— William Lam (@lamw.bsky.social | @*protected email*) (@lamw) January 24, 2021

For those interested in just the VMware Event Router Arm64 image, you can access it here and we plan to make that an official image shortly. For those interested in setting up a fully functional Arm deployment of VEBA and Knative processor, you can find the detailed instructions below.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, ESXi-Arm, Kubernetes Tags // Arm, k3s, Knative, Kubernetes, Raspberry Pi, VEBA

VMware Event Broker Appliance (VEBA) v0.5.0

12.16.2020 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

Just in time for the holidays, the VMware Event Broker Appliance (VEBA) team is excited to announce our latest v0.5.0 release, which is also our last planned release of the year. 2020 has been a very difficult year for everyone, but looking at the positives, we could not have been happier with the engagement and community contributions that we have received from our user base. I just want to say, THANK YOU to everyone who has used and have shared their feedback on VEBA. We have so much more planned for 2021, cannot wait to share with the community! 

While reviewing some of the GitHub commits (changes) for the v0.5.0 release, I had noticed the number of commits in this release has even surpassed our very first v0.1.0 release back in November of last year.  

Here is a quick recap of all 6 VEBA releases: 

  • v0.1.0 (11/25/19) - 351 commits 
  • v0.2.0 (01/23/20) - 311 commits 
  • v0.3.0 (03/10/20) - 252 commits 
  • v0.4.0 (05/11/20) - 191 commits 
  • v0.4.1 (06/10/20) - 141 commits 
  • v0.5.0 (11/25/20) - 356 commits 

Let’s now take a look at what is new with the v0.5.0 release. 

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation Tags // VEBA, VMware Event Broker Appliance

Integrating VMware Cloud Notification Gateway with VMware Event Broker Appliance (VEBA)

07.29.2020 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

I previously wrote about the VMware Cloud Notification Gateway (NGW) which provides curated notifications delivered to VMware Cloud on AWS users. By default, NGW supports several  types of notification channels such as email, VMware Cloud Console UI, VMware Cloud Activity Log, vRealize Log Intelligence Cloud (vRLIC) and the vSphere UI when using the vCenter Cloud Gateway. A lesser known feature of NGW is the ability to extend into even more channels by leveraging its webhook functionality which is available when using NGW API.

For a basic "pass through" of the NGW notification to another cloud service such as Slack or Microsoft Teams as example, you can simple setup an incoming webhook on Slack or Microsoft Teams, which I had covered in the previous blog post. From there, you can configure an NGW subscription and forward the NGW notification to the specified incoming webhook.

For more interesting scenarios where customers may want to perform some additional data processing when the NGW notification arrives or run some code/automation and integrate that with other systems which can include your on-premises infrastructure, the basic webhook workflow is not sufficient. Having said that, at the end of the previous blog post I did hint at a solution that would enable customers to support such scenarios which is by leveraging the VMware Event Broker Appliance (VEBA) solution.


The way this works is that we are still taking advantage of the NGW webhook capability but instead of forwarding the NGW notification to a cloud service that supports an incoming webhook, we are sending it to VEBA for processing. Once the notification has been received by VEBA, customers can apply additional logic by using any language of their choice which runs as an automated function and is then responsible for sending the final payload to its destination. This is really the power of VEBA which enables customers to perform any additional processing or business logic to an event before sending it out to its intended target.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VMware Cloud on AWS Tags // Notification Gateway, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS, VMware Event Broker Appliance

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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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