ProTip – vCAC Data Collection
#vCAC #ProTip: run Data Collection against a Compute Resource that has changed to make new objects available. #VMware pic.twitter.com/wuTiZ44r2o
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC #ProTip: run Data Collection against a Compute Resource that has changed to make new objects available. #VMware pic.twitter.com/wuTiZ44r2o
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC 6.1 #ProTip: run “/home/darwin/tools/import_oob_content.sh” as “darwin_user” to install OOO content from #vCAS pic.twitter.com/jsJ1bZZ05f
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC 6.1 #ProTip: Use #ITBM for detailed reporting on vCenter or vCAC Tenant, Bus Grp, BP, or VM objects. #vmware pic.twitter.com/FdR2fY8ZFQ
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC 6.1 #ProTip: Reclamations are now possible on all platforms! Use Adv Search to quickly locate VMs. #vmware pic.twitter.com/YStwdtAs7B
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC #ProTip: For best AD performance, join SSO (IDVA) to AD for native queries. Then use Default Tenant and multi Business Groups.
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
#vCAC 6.1 #ProTip: use the new Bulk Import tool to rapidly import existing VMs to #IaaS management euphoria. #vmware pic.twitter.com/sSxMADJ7uV
— Jad El-Zein (@virtualjad) September 15, 2014
+++++
@virtualjad…
Update 04/22/15: After further investigation around the effectiveness of these optimization tips on a vRA 6.2.1 environment, I am convinced that several of the tweaks do in fact provide some level of perceived IaaS UI performance improvements. I’m very interested in hearing your feedback on these findings (i.e. give it a try and let me know!).
Update 12/10/14: I have been advised that the optimization tweaks highlighted in this article will not provide any added benefits to vCAC/vRA 6.1 or 6.2. This is due to the way the IaaS interface is now presented back to the user (via the vCAC appliance vs. directly to the user session). The good news is VMware dev’s are hard at work at baking optimization right into the products, starting with a significant boost in the recently released vRA 6.2.
VMware’s vCloud Automation Center (vCAC) can transform how an enterprise delivers IT. It’s out-of-the-box functionality will help IT deliver Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) along with X-as-a-Service (XaaS / Everything-a-a-S) in a matter of clicks. Once extended into the datacenter’s ecosystem with vCAC’s extensibility engine, it will help integrate, orchestrate, and automate native and 3rd-party tools, services, and infrastructure, thrusting the enterprise into a new level of self-serviced IT efficiency.…
VMware’s Network Virtualization Platform, NSX, is an immensely powerful technology that can transform a datacenter’s infrastructure and streamline network service delivery across the enterprise. NSX’s scope, scale, and capability will easily impress techies, CCIE’s, and IT stakeholders alike. NSX changes the topology of a traditional hardware-bound network by eliminating the dependency on all that “intelligence” baked into proprietary hardware. Instead, the logic and associated services are delivered through a software control plane. Separating the control and data planes effectively reduces the physical network to a glorified IP packet forwarder.
With that said, it is also important to understand that NSX is not a re-write of your network and the fundamental concepts it is built upon. The abstraction of the logic from the physical underpinnings is a modern approach to designing, building, and servicing network architectures, but the fundamentals — the protocols, tools, concepts, etc. — are still at play. And for that reason, i’m often baffled when I enter into a debate with a “traditional” network engineer about the ins-and-outs of physical vs. virtual networking technologies like NSX. What I quickly realize is they are not defending the concepts or technology, they are defending their skill set. It’s a fear or reluctance of straying from what they know best.…