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Creating Custom VIBs For ESXi 5.0 & 5.1 with VIB Author Fling

09.28.2012 by William Lam // 41 Comments

VMware Labs just released a really cool new Fling called VIB Author which is a tool that allows you to easily create custom VIBs for your ESXi 5.x hosts. If you have tried to create custom ESXi firewall rules or add custom scripts to your ESXi host, you may have noticed they are not persisted after a system reboot and you had to play all sorts of games to get the files to persist. The VIB Author tool now solves that problem and you can even take your custom VIB and integrate them into an Auto Deploy Image Profile using Image Builder. Before you jump right in, be sure to read over the important note in the documentation before getting started.

So how does the VIB Author tool work?

You will need to provide two pieces of input: payload which is set of files you wish to include in your VIB and the descriptor.xml which contains the metadata for your files. From that, VIB Author can produce either a VIB and/or an offline bundle (can be used with Image Builder).

VIB Author is distributed only as an RPM and you will need to install the VIB Author tool on a 32-bit Linux system (sorry, no 64-bit support). In my home setup, I went with CentOS 6.2 i386 as it was free to download & easy to setup or you may choose go with SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2 which is the recommended platform per the documentation.

UPDATE (07/25/23) - To create custom VIBs for ESXi 8.x or later, please see the update process HERE.

To install the RPM, run the following command:

rpm -ivh vmware-esx-vib-author-5.0.0-0.0.844296.i386.rpm

In the example below, I will show you how to create a custom VIB that contains several different configurations:

  • Custom Firewall Rule
  • Custom Startup script (adds a static route)
  • Custom Files (ghettoVCB)

Disclaimer: The example below is not officially supported by VMware, please thoroughly test this in a development environment before using in production.

Here is the directory structure for the example that we will be going through:

Step 1 - Create your stage directory structure which we will then populate with your payload files as well as the descriptor.xml file.

mkdir -p stage/payloads/payload1

Step 2 - Create your descriptor.xml file which should be placed in the stage directory. For more details on the parameters within the descriptor.xml, please take a look at the documentation.

Here is an example of my descriptor.xml file:

<vib version="5.0">
  <type>bootbank</type>
  <name>virtuallyghetto</name>
  <version>5.0.0-0.0.1</version>
  <vendor>virtuallyGhetto</vendor>
  <summary>Custom VIB from virtuallyGhetto</summary>
  <description>Adds custom firewall rule, ghettoVCB script and static routes to ESXi host</description>
  <relationships>
    <depends>
    </depends>
    <conflicts/>
    <replaces/>
    <provides/>
    <compatibleWith/>
  </relationships>
  <software-tags>
  </software-tags>
  <system-requires>
    <maintenance-mode>false</maintenance-mode>
  </system-requires>
  <file-list>
  </file-list>
  <acceptance-level>community</acceptance-level>
  <live-install-allowed>true</live-install-allowed>
  <live-remove-allowed>true</live-remove-allowed>
  <cimom-restart>false</cimom-restart>
  <stateless-ready>true</stateless-ready>
  <overlay>false</overlay>
  <payloads>
    <payload name="payload1" type="vgz"></payload>
  </payloads>
</vib>

Step 3 - Create the directory structure and store the files you wish to include under payload1. Ensure the the directory structure matches the absolute path of how you want the files to appear on the ESXi host. For example, if you wish to create a file call foo in /etc/vmware/foo then your directory structure should look like stage/payloads/payload1/etc/vmware/foo

Note: In the documentation, there is a list of default supported paths, if you venture off of this supported list, then you will need to issue the -f flag when creating your VIB as well as installing your VIB on your ESXi host

So for our examples we have the following files:

stage/payloads/payload1/etc/vmware/firewall/virtuallyghetto.xml
This one should be pretty straight forward, we are just creating a custom ESXi firewall rule and you will need to place your configuration file under /etc/vmware/firewall, please take a look at this article for more details on creating your own firewall rules.

stage/payloads/payload1/etc/rc.local.d/999.addStaticRoute.sh
This is a custom shell script that adds a static route to an ESXi host upon bootup under /etc/rc.local.d. There maybe other startup scripts that could be executed and you do not want to conflict with any system defaults. I recommend you label yours with a high number such as 999 to ensure it is one of the last scripts to execute.

stage/payloads/payload1/opt/ghettoVCB/{ghettoVCB.conf,ghettoCB-restore.sh,ghettoVCB.sh}
This is a custom set of files that I would like to store in ESXi under /opt directory and the files are my free ghettoVCB backup script.

Here is a copy of my directory structure (stage.zip) which can be used as a reference.

Step 4 - Now we ready to create our VIB and/or offline bundle by specifying our stage directory as input. In this example, we will generate both a VIB as well as an offline bundle containing the same contents. Run the following command:

vibauthor -C -t stage -v virtuallyghetto.vib -O virtuallyghetto-offline-bundle.zip -f

Note: Since we added some files outside of the default supported paths, we also need to specify the -f flag to force the creation.

We can also extract information about our VIB by using the -i option in VIB Author, to do so, run the following command:

vibauthor -i -v virtuallyghetto.vib

Finally, we are now ready to copy the VIB over to our ESXi host and install our custom VIB.

To install VIB run the following command:

esxcli software vib install -v /vmfs/volumes/[datastore-name]/virtuallyghetto.vib -f

To install the offline bundle run the following command:

esxcli software vib install -d /vmfs/volumes/[datastore-name]/virtuallyghetto-offline-bundle.zip -f

Note: You need to specify the -f flag to force the installation since we created files in an unsupported path. I have been able to test the VIB and offline bundle installation on both ESXi 5.0 as well as ESXi 5.1

To confirm we have succesfully installed our custom VIB, we can query it by running the following command:

esxcli software vib list | grep virtuallyghetto

So there you have it, in just a few steps, you can create your own custom VIBs!

Categories // ESXi, Not Supported Tags // auto deploy, ESXi, ESXi 5.0, fling, image builder, image profile, tgz, vgz, vib

A Pretty Cool Method of Upgrading to ESXi 5.1

09.18.2012 by William Lam // 44 Comments

I recently came across an interesting article by Andreas Peetz which shows you how to patch an ESXi host using an image profile that is directly available on VMware's online depot within the ESXi shell. I knew that VMware had online depots for use with VUM and Auto Deploy but I was not aware of this particular method, especially directly from the host.

Disclaimer: This method assumes you can install the default ESXi Image Profile with no additional drivers or packages, else you may have connectivity issue after the upgrade. If you still need to customize the ESXi Image Profile before installation, you will still need to use something like Image Builder and then upload that to your online depot.

Note: There are many ways that you can patch/upgrade your ESXi hosts, here is another article that provides more details for command-line only methods.

Before you get started, you will need to make sure that your ESXi host has the httpClient firewall rule enabled, else you will not be able to connect to VMware's online depot. To enable this, run the following ESXCLI command:

esxcli network firewall ruleset set -e true -r httpClient

Also make sure that your ESXi host can reach the following URL (you can specify a proxy if needed):

https://hostupdate.vmware.com/software/VUM/PRODUCTION/main/vmw-depot-index.xml

To view the available ESXi Image Profiles, run the following ESXCLI command (use the --proxy if you need to specify a proxy to reach VMware's online depot):

esxcli software sources profile list -d https://hostupdate.vmware.com/software/VUM/PRODUCTION/main/vmw-depot-index.xml

If you are able to successfully connect to the online depot, you see a list of all the ESXi Image Profiles that are available to you. You will see two ESXi 5.1 Image Profiles (these were recently published), one with VMware Tools and one without VMware Tools.

Note: Before you begin, make sure you do not have any running VMs and put your host into maintenance mode.

Let's go ahead and upgrade our ESXi 5.0 Update 1 host to latest ESXi 5.1. To install the new Image Profile, run the following command:

esxcli software profile update -d https://hostupdate.vmware.com/software/VUM/PRODUCTION/main/vmw-depot-index.xml -p ESXi-5.1.0-799733-standard

This can take a few minutes to complete depending on how fast you can pull down the Image Profile. Once it is done, you will see all the new VIBs that have been updated and you will be asked to reboot for the changes to go into effect and then you will be running ESXi 5.1! Pretty cool IMO!

Categories // Automation, ESXCLI, ESXi, vSphere, vSphere 5.5, vSphere 6.0, vSphere 6.5 Tags // esxcli, ESXi 5.1, firewall, image profile, upgrade, vSphere 5.1

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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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