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Configuring Standalone vRealize Orchestrator with VMware Cloud on AWS

07.11.2019 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

vRealize Orchestrator (vRO) is powerful workflow engine that many of our customers have been using to automate across a number of different VMware and 3rd party solutions. It is also a foundational component to vRealize Automation (vRA) and it enables our customers to build end-to-end IT and Developer workflows across different Clouds: Private, Public and Hybrid.

It should come as no surprise that existing vRO/vRA customers would like to take advantage of VMware Cloud on AWS and be able to add its vCenter Server instance to vRO for Automation purposes. A few weeks back, I had heard mixed results from our field and customers when attempting to add VMware Cloud on AWS vCenter Server endpoint to vRO. I was actually working with another customer on a related topic and I decided I give this a try in my lab, which was running the standalone vRO 7.5 Appliance.

I did indeed run into a problem when attempting to add vCenter Server as an endpoint in vRO. It turns out this was due to a bug with the vSphere vRO Plugin which has since been resolved with the latest vRO 7.6 release. In any case, there is a simple workaround for customers that are currently not running the latest vRO appliance and you can find the instructions below.

[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VMware Cloud on AWS, vRealize Suite Tags // orchestrator, vcenter orchestrator, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS, vrealize orchestrator

Org vDC to vCenter Resource Pool Workflow Using vCenter Orchestrator

04.06.2012 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

I was helping a colleague of mind this evening with a question about retrieving a vCenter Resource Pool given a vCloud Director Organization vDC using vCenter Orchestrator. However, this particular workflow does not exists out of the box with vCO, but with a little help from the vCloud API, we can easily create our own workflow to accomplish this request. We will be leveraging the Query Service introduced in vCloud Director 1.5 and the "orgVdcResourcePoolRelation" query type which provides a mapping between an Org vDC to vCenter Resource Pool.

You can download the vCO workflow that I created called Get Org vDC to Resource Pool Mapping and import it into your vCO environment. You will need to make sure you have the vCloud Director vCO plugin installed.

Here is a example of running the workflow which accepts a vCloud Director Org vDC:

Here is the results of the workflow:

You will notice that it produces the MoRef (Managed Object Reference) to a vCenter Resource Pool instead of the actual Resource Pool object. The reason for this is the query only returns the href of the Org vDC, href of vCenter Server and the MoRef of the Resource Pool. Using the MoRef, you can connect to your vSphere environment and retrieve the Resource Pool, but I will leave that as an exercise for my colleague 🙂

Note: If you go through the query types, you may have noticed the resourcePool query type, the reason this will not work is that it only provides a list of root Resource Pools (basically vSphere Clusters) and it does not return the sub-resource pools that are created for Organization vDCs.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // orchestrator, org vdc, query service, resource pool, vcd, vcloud director, vCO

Congratulations to Chris Greer for Winning Automating vSphere with vCenter Orchestrator

03.17.2012 by William Lam // Leave a Comment

A week ago, I ran a simple contest to give a way a free copy of  Automating vSphere with vCenter Orchestrator Book. To enter the contest, you just had leave a comment with 5 things you wish or hope to automate using vCenter Orchestrator. I am happy to announce the winner of Cody Bunch's new book is Chris Greer! Congratulations Chris!

Chris's comment was the following:

1). I would like to put a web ui in front of the request process for a vm.
2). I want to call out to other services like request tracker via their rest interface
3). I want to automate vcloud director with automated task like license tracking
4). I want to automate network appliances like load balancers and firewalls when deploying specific templates (like web servers)
5). I want to be able to kick off vco workflows via a soap/rest call to extend current scripts
Bonus: I'd love to configure SRM but I don't think it's integrated yet.

Chris, hopefully the new Automating vSphere with vCenter Orchestrator book will help you accomplish these tasks!

Thank you to those who enter and if you did not win, you should still go and grab a copy of Cody's book (available in Kindle and paper back format) and learn how easy it is to leverage vCO in your vSphere environment.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // orchestrator, vCO, vSphere

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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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