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VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook

VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook

By : Abhilash G B
5 (1)
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VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook

VMware vSphere 6.7 Cookbook

5 (1)
By: Abhilash G B

Overview of this book

VMware vSphere is the most comprehensive core suite of SDDC solutions on the market. It helps transform data centers into simplified on-premises private cloud infrastructures. This edition of the book focuses on the latest version, vSphere 6.7. The books starts with chapters covering the greenfield deployment of vSphere 6.7 components and the upgrade of existing vSphere components to 6.7. You will then learn how to configure storage and network access for a vSphere environment. Get to grips with optimizing your vSphere environment for resource distribution and utilization using features such as DRS and DPM, along with enabling high availability for vSphere components using vSphere HA, VMware FT, and VCHA. Then, you will learn how to facilitate large-scale deployment of stateless/stateful ESXi hosts using Auto Deploy. Finally, you will explore how to upgrade/patch a vSphere environment using vSphere Update Manager, secure it using SSL certificates, and then monitor its performance with tools such as vSphere Performance Charts and esxtop. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed in the core functionalities of vSphere 6.7 and be able to effectively deploy, manage, secure, and monitor your environment.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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Configuring vCenter Admission Control

A well-designed HA cluster should have enough free resources to restart all of the business-critical virtual machines in the cluster, in the event of a host(s) failure. For this to be possible, it is essential for the cluster to maintain enough free CPU and memory resources, which are referred to as failover capacity. The failover capacity enables the restarting of the VMs while the cluster capacity is reduced, owing to the host failure.

A failover capacity that has been configured on a cluster determines the number of host failures that the cluster can sustain and still leave enough usable resources to support all the running and restarted virtual machines in the cluster. vCenter ensures that the configured failover capacity is maintained by using a mechanism called vCenter Admission Control.

We will cover more about this in the How it works...

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