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vSphere Tag Attach/Detach events now in VMware Cloud on AWS

03.05.2019 by William Lam // 4 Comments

The underlying products (vSphere, vSAN & NSX) that run within VMware Cloud on AWS (VMC) are constantly being improved with new capabilities and enhancements. As a service, VMC is updated more frequently than a traditional on-premise environment and one huge benefit for our customers is that they get to access all the latest and greatest features of the platform!

Yesterday, I came to learn about some improvements that we had made to our vSphere Tagging infrastructure to start publishing vCenter Server Events for when a vSphere Tag is attached or detached from an inventory object such as a Virtual Machine. This has been a frequently requested feature by our customers, especially for auditing purposes and this also enables the ability to perform additional actions through the use of a vCenter Alarm.

UPDATE (10/13/20) - vSphere 7.0 Update 1 now includes vCenter Events for both vSphere Tag Attach/Detach operations. For complete list of out of the box vCenter Server Events, you can refer to this Github repo.

In the vSphere UI for a VMC vCenter Server, you can now see these new tagging events by selecting the vCenter Server inventory object and then go to Monitor->Events and filter by "attached tag" or "detached tag".


[Read more...]

Categories // Automation, VMware Cloud on AWS, vSphere Tags // event, tag, VMC, VMware Cloud on AWS

Applying Custom Attributes beyond just Host & Virtual Machine Objects

03.09.2016 by William Lam // 5 Comments

I recently came to learn about a neat little tidbit from one of my readers, Ziad, regarding vSphere Custom Attributes. I had been a long time user of Custom Attributes when I was a customer and heavily used it in-conjunction with Automation. This is how many of our customers leveraged this capability, especially around provisioning and reporting use cases. Custom Attributes allows you to specify custom "keys" associated with either a Virtual Machine or an ESXi host object. Once these keys have been created, you can then assign object-specific metadata "values" to these objects. An example would be a Custom Attribute called "Application Owner" and for VM1 I can have a value of "Duncan Epping" and for VM2 I can have a value of "Alan Renouf".

Custom Attributes can be created using either the vSphere API or from the vSphere C# Client (currently not possible using the vSphere Web Client). The UI has already restricted Custom Attributes to either a Host, Virtual Machine or Global which means it applies to both objects as shown in the screenshot below. This has always been my understanding of how Custom Attributes work and has also been documented as such.

applying-custom-feilds-beyond-hosts-and-vms-0
Well, it turns out, this "restriction" was only a UI restriction. The actual Custom Attributes feature can actually be applied across variety of vSphere Objects and not just limited to Hosts and Virtual Machines when using the vSphere API. If we look at the Custom Attributes API which uses the customFieldsManager and specifically the AddCustomFieldDef() method which is used to create new custom fields. We can see that the moType property can accept any of the supported vSphere Objects such as the following:

  • ClusterComputeResource (Multi-ESXi host Cluster)
  • ComputeResource (Single ESXi host Cluster)
  • Datacenter
  • Datastore
  • DistributedVirtualSwitch
  • Folder
  • HostSystem
  • Network
  • ResourcePool
  • StoragePod (Datastore Cluster)
  • VirtualApp
  • VirtualMachine

I decided to quickly verify this by giving this a try in my lab and using PowerCLI (just one of the many options to the vSphere API) to exercise the Custom Attributes API against a Datacenter, Cluster, Datastore and Network object.

We start off by retrieving the CustomFieldsManager and then creating four new Custom Fields for each of the respective vSphere Objects that we want to associate with.

$customFieldMgr = Get-View ($global:DefaultVIServer.ExtensionData.Content.CustomFieldsManager)

# Custom Field Key names

$dcCFName = "DatacenterCF"
$clCFName = "ClusterCF"
$dsCFName = "DatastoreCF"
$netCFName = "NetworkCF"

# Create Custom Field Keys for Datacenter, Cluster, Datastore & Network objects

$customFieldMgr.AddCustomFieldDef($dcCFName,"Datacenter",$null,$null)
$customFieldMgr.AddCustomFieldDef($clCFName,"ClusterComputeResource",$null,$null)
$customFieldMgr.AddCustomFieldDef($dsCFName,"Datastore",$null,$null)
$customFieldMgr.AddCustomFieldDef($netCFName,"Network",$null,$null)

Next, we retrieve a Datacenter, Cluster, Datastore and Network object in our vSphere inventory and then call the setCustomValue() API which is used to set the value for a particular Custom Attribute that has been defined for that object.

# Set Custom Field for Datacenter, Cluster, Datastore & Network objects

$datacenterName = "Santa-Barbara"
$datacenterView = Get-View -ViewType Datacenter -Property Name -Filter @{"name"=$datacenterName}
$datacenterView.setCustomValue("$dcCFName","AB-123")

$clusterName = "Production"
$clusterView = Get-View -ViewType  ClusterComputeResource -Property Name -Filter @{"name"=$clusterName}
$clusterView.setCustomValue("$clCFName","BC-456")

$datastoreName = "datastore1"
$datastoreView = Get-View -ViewType Datastore -Property Name -Filter @{"name"=$datastoreName}
$datastoreView.setCustomValue("$dsCFName","CD-789")

$networkName = "VM Network"
$networkView = Get-View -ViewType Network -Property Name -Filter @{"name"=$networkName}
$networkView.setCustomValue("$netCFName","EF-012")

If we take a look at our vSphere Web/C# Client, we should see tasks being initiated on setting the custom value. So far, so good.

applying-custom-feilds-beyond-hosts-and-vms-1
Finally, it is time to retrieve these Custom Attributes to see if they were indeed properly set. We first need to build up a hash table of the key's name, so we can easily correlate the specific Custom Attribute name with the unique key ID. Next, we can then extract the Value property which extends CustomFieldStringValue and contains both the key which we can look up from our look up table and most importantly, the value which contains the data that we had set earlier.

# Retrieve Custom Field for Datacenter, Cluster, Datastore & Network objects

# Create Custom Field & Name lookup table
# Borrowed from my buddy Alan Renouf http://www.virtu-al.net/2009/05/29/powercli-on-steroids-custom-attributes/
$customKeyLookup = @{}
$customNameLookup = @{}
$customFieldMgr.Field | % {
$customKeyLookup.Add($_.Key, $_.Name)
$customNameLookup.Add($_.Name, $_.Key)
}

# Print the Custom Fields property for each vSphere Object

$datacenterView = Get-View -ViewType Datacenter -Property Name,Value -Filter @{"name"=$datacenterName}
Write-Host "`nDatacenter:" $datacenterName "has Custom Field:" $customKeyLookup[$datacenterView.Value[0].Key] "with value:" $datacenterView.Value[0].Value "`n"

$clusterView = Get-View -ViewType  ClusterComputeResource -Property Name,Value -Filter @{"name"=$clusterName}
Write-Host "`Cluster:" $clusterName "has Custom Field:" $customKeyLookup[$clusterView.Value[0].Key] "with value:" $clusterView.Value[0].Value "`n"

$datastoreView = Get-View -ViewType Datastore -Property Name,Value -Filter @{"name"=$datastoreName}
Write-Host "`Datastore:" $datastoreName "has Custom Field:" $customKeyLookup[$datastoreView.Value[0].Key] "with value:" $datastoreView.Value[0].Value "`n"

$networkView = Get-View -ViewType Network -Property Name,Value -Filter @{"name"=$networkName}
Write-Host "`Network:" $networkName "has Custom Field:" $customKeyLookup[$networkView.Value[0].Key] "with value:" $networkView.Value[0].Value "`n"

Here is a screenshot of running the above PowerCLI code and we can see the values match up with what we had set earlier. This is pretty awesome if you ask me!

applying-custom-feilds-beyond-hosts-and-vms-2
Some of you might be thinking, if Custom Attributes can be applied across different vSphere Objects, then why should I use vSphere Tags? Well, there are definitely some differences between the two today and I highly recommend you give this article a read first before continuing further. Although Custom Attributes may provide similiar behaviors to vSphere Tags, there is a lot of limitations that come with Custom Attributes. I do believe vSphere Tags is the future and when we bring vSphere Tags to parity with some of the use cases that Custom Attributes can only cover today only, it will be an even more powerful feature.

There are several major benefits to vSphere Tags over Custom Attributes. One they are multi-vCenter Server aware when joined to the same SSO Domain, which means existing Tags/Tag Categories are automatically made available versus Custom Attributes which are bounded by a single vCenter Server. vSphere Tags is also deeply integrated with VM Storage Policy and Content Library for provisioning which is lacking with Custom Attributes and require custom Automation to leverage its metadata. A single vSphere Tag can support one or more groupings to a given vSphere Object, where as Custom Attribute must be tied to a single object. Lastly, being able to globally search across various tagged vSphere Objects is trivial with vSphere Tags. For Custom Attributes, you would need to first identity the object which means you must search through all objects unless you know the one you are looking for first and then iterate through the list of Custom Attributes looking for the specific key and then finally the value. There is definitely still room for improving vSphere Tags, but I think it is definitely the more superior metadata system that customers should be looking at going forward.

One final note which I thought was interesting is that PowerCLI also provides a few cmdlets for managing Custom Attributes and it looks like they did in fact support different vSphere Object types as documented here. The only issue is that it does not cover all vSphere Objects that is possible and if you still may want to consider calling into the vSphere API from PowerCLI and by-passing the default cmdlets.

Categories // Automation, vSphere Tags // custom attributes, metadata, PowerCLI, tag, tagging

How To Add A Tag (Log prefix) To Syslog Entries

05.07.2013 by William Lam // 2 Comments

Last year I wrote an article on how to forward vCenter Server logs to a remote syslog server using the built in syslog-ng client in the VCSA. A few weeks back, I received an interesting email from Michael White sharing details about adding a "tag" or more specifically, adding a string prefix to each syslog entry being forwarded. This was interesting as it enables a user to easily search for a specific log entry based on a "tag" and comes really in handy when you have multiple log sources being forwarded from the same host. An example of this would be the various logs from a vCenter Server such as vpxd, vws, inventoryservice, etc. which all have their own individual logs coming from the same host.

Within the Syslog-ng client configuration, you can specify the log_prefix() option and the string you wish to prefix a given log source. The tag has a specific syntax that must contain a : (colon) and a whitespace after the string (e.g. "VC_APP: ").

Using the vCenter Server as example, we could add the following tags:
After restarting the syslog-ng client for the changes to going into effect, you can head over to your syslog server to view the updated syslog entries. In the screenshot below, we can see we have log sources from both our VC_APP (vpxd.log) and VC_IS (ds.log) entries as specified in our syslog-ng client configurations.

Note: For newer versions of syslog-ng, program_override() is used instead of log_prefix(). The syntax for that would be program_override("VC_APP").

I want to thank Michael for sharing this cool tidbit!

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // syslog, tag, VCSA

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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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