Friday, December 20, 2019

VMware PowerCLI 101 - part6 - vSphere networking

Networking is one of the important factors for ensuring service availability. Incorrect network configurations will lead to the unavailability of data and services and if this happens in a production environment it will negatively affect the business. 

In this article, I will briefly explain how to use PowerCLI to work with basic vSphere networking.

Connect to vCenter server using:
Connect-VIServer <IP address of vCenter>


VM IP


To get all IP details of a VM:
(Get-VM -Name <VM name>).Guest.IPAddress




VM network adapters, MAC, and IP


To get all network adapters, MAC address and IP details of a VM:
(Get-VM -Name <VM name>).Guest.Nics | select *



OR

(Get-VM -Name <VM name>).ExtensionData.Guest.Net


VDS


To get all the Virtual Distributed Switches (VDS):
Get-VDSwitch



To get all the details of a specific VDS:
Get-VDSwitch -Name <VD Switch name> | select *




To get VDS security policy:
Get-VDSwitch -Name <VD Switch name> | Get-VDSecurityPolicy | select *



VD Port group


To get all port groups of a specific VDS:
Get-VDPortgroup -VDSwitch <VD Switch name>



To get all the details of a specific port group in a VDS:
Get-VDPortgroup -VDSwitch <VD Switch name> -Name <Port group name> | select *




VD Port


To get all VD ports of a specific VD port group in a VDS:
Get-VDSwitch <VD Switch name> | Get-VDPortgroup <Port group name> | Get-VDPort

To get only active VD ports of a specific VD port group in a VDS:
Get-VDSwitch <VD Switch name> | Get-VDPortgroup <Port group name> | Get-VDPort -ActiveOnly


To get all details of a specific VD port in a VDS:
Get-VDPort -Key <Value> -VDSwitch <VD Switch name> | select * 




VM connected to a VD port


To get the VM that is connected to a VD port:
(Get-VDPort -Key <Value> -VDSwitch <VD Switch name>).ExtensionData.Connectee
Get-VM -Id <VM Id>



Find VM using NIC MAC


Get-VM | where {$_.ExtensionData.Guest.Net.MacAddress -eq '<MAC Address>'}


Hope it was useful. Cheers!


Related posts


Thursday, December 19, 2019

Working with iDRAC9 Redfish API using PowerShell - Part 4


In this article, I will explain how to use iDRAC Redfish API to Power On and Graceful Shutdown a server using PowerShell. This is applicable to all Dell EMC servers having iDRAC. It can be a general-purpose PowerEdge rack server, Ready Node, Appliance, etc. I've tested on iDRAC9.

Note: In a production environment please make sure to follow proper shutdown or reboot procedure (if any) before performing any system reset actions on the server.

[CmdletBinding()]
param(
    [Parameter(Mandatory)]
    [String]$idrac_ip,

    [Parameter(Mandatory)]
    [ValidateSet('On''GracefulShutdown')]
    [String]$ResetType
)

#To fix the connection issues to iDRAC REST API
add-type @"
    using System.Net;
    using System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates;
    public class TrustAllCertsPolicy : ICertificatePolicy {
    public bool CheckValidationResult(
        ServicePoint srvPoint, X509Certificate certificate,
        WebRequest request, int certificateProblem) {
        return true;
        }
    }
"@

[System.Net.ServicePointManager]::CertificatePolicy = New-Object TrustAllCertsPolicy
[System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [System.Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls12 -bor [System.Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls11

#Get iDRAC creds
$Credentials = Get-Credential -Message "Enter iDRAC Creds"

$JsonBody = @{"ResetType" = $ResetType} | ConvertTo-Json
$u1 = "https://$($idrac_ip)/redfish/v1/Systems/System.Embedded.1/Actions/ComputerSystem.Reset"

Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $u1 -Credential $Credentials -Method Post -UseBasicParsing -ContentType 'application/json' -Body $JsonBody -Headers @{"Accept"="application/json"} -Verbose


Hope it was useful. Cheers!

Related posts



References


iDRAC9 Redfish API guide

Monday, December 16, 2019

vRealize Automation 8 - Part1 - Installation

Background


  • vRealize Automation (vRA) has two consumption models now:
    • vRA on-prem
    • vRA cloud (SAAS offering)
  • From vRA 8.0 onwards the same code being used in vRA cloud is taken and packaged together for on-prem use.
  • vRA 8.0 is focused on greenfield environments (new vRA deployments).
  • If you want to upgrade from vRA 7.x VMware recommends waiting until vRA 8.x as it will have a migration tool that helps the upgrade process. 

Before starting the installation process, I strongly recommend you to go through the below documentation links.


Installation


Download the installer ISO file and mount it. If you are running it from a Windows machine, browse to win32 folder and run installer.exe file. During the installation process first LCM VM will be deployed and it is responsible for deploying IDM and vRA VMs.

Note: Make sure DNS entries for LCM, IDM, and vRA are present and resolvable.

Click install.


Click next.


Accept EULA.


Provide vCenter details.


Accept.


Select a datacenter location.


Select a compute cluster.


Select a datastore.


Provide network configuration details.


Set password.


Provide LCM config details.


Provide IDM config details.


Provide vRA config details.


Review summary.


Click submit to start the installation process.


Once the installation is successful you will get the following URLs to navigate to vRSLCM and vRA UI.


Login to LCM.



Login to vRA.


Provide creds.


There you go! vRA 8.0 is successfully deployed.


Hope it was useful. Cheers!

References


Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Working with iDRAC9 Redfish API using PowerShell - Part 3

In this article, I will explain how to access the iDRAC Redfish API using session-based authentication.


[CmdletBinding()]
param(
    [Parameter(Mandatory)]
    [String]$idrac_ip
)

#To fix the connection issues to iDRAC REST API
add-type @"
    using System.Net;
    using System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates;
    public class TrustAllCertsPolicy : ICertificatePolicy {
    public bool CheckValidationResult(
        ServicePoint srvPoint, X509Certificate certificate,
        WebRequest request, int certificateProblem) {
        return true;
        }
    }
"@

[System.Net.ServicePointManager]::CertificatePolicy = New-Object TrustAllCertsPolicy
[System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [System.Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls12 -bor [System.Net.SecurityProtocolType]::Tls11

#Get iDRAC creds
$Credentials = Get-Credential -Message "Enter iDRAC Creds"

$creds_json = '{"UserName": "$($Credentials.UserName)", "Password": "$($Credentials.GetNetworkCredential().Password)"}'
$creds_json = $ExecutionContext.InvokeCommand.ExpandString($creds_json)

#Using Invoke-WebRequest
try {
    $result1 = Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://$($idrac_ip)/redfish/v1/Sessions " -Method POST -ContentType 'application/json' -Headers @{"Accept"="application/json"} -Body $creds_json -Verbose
}
catch {
    Write-Error -Message "Failed to invoke the API! Incorrect creds!"
    $PSCmdlet.ThrowTerminatingError($PSItem)
}

$auth_head = @{
"X-Auth-Token" = $result1.Headers.'X-Auth-Token'
"accept" = "application/json" }

#URI to get basic system info
$u1 = "https://$($idrac_ip)/redfish/v1/Systems/System.Embedded.1"

#Using Invoke-RestMethod
try {
    $output = Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $u1 -Method Get -Headers $auth_head -ContentType 'application/json' -Verbose
}
catch {
    Write-Error -Message "Failed to invoke the API! Incorrect creds!"
    $PSCmdlet.ThrowTerminatingError($PSItem)
}

Write-Output "`nBasic System Info:" $output



Hope it was useful. Cheers!

Related posts

Working with iDRAC9 Redfish API using PowerShell - Part 1

Working with iDRAC9 Redfish API using PowerShell - Part 2


References

iDRAC9 Redfish API guide

Friday, November 1, 2019

vRealize Operations Manager 7.5 - Part9 - Dashboard sharing

The ability to share dashboards using URLs without login requirements is a very useful feature starting from vROps 7.0.

  • Select the dashboard that you want to share and click on the share icon as marked in the screenshot below.



  • Click on "COPY LINK" and provide it to whoever necessary. You can also set link expiry to 1 Day, 1 Week, 1 Month, 3 Months, or Never Expire as per your requirement.

  • To unshare a link, enter the link that you want to unshare as shown below and click "UNSHARE".

Hope it was useful. Cheers!


Related posts


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Docker 101 - Part4 - Creating images using dockerfile

In this article, I will briefly explain how to create your own image using Dockerfile. For example, I will be creating an FIO image. FIO is a storage stress test tool and this image can be used for container storage IO benchmarking/ testing.

  • Login to the CentOS docker host.
  • Create a file named "Dockerfile".
  • # vi Dockerfile
  • Add the below two lines and save it.

  • # docker build ./

  • Once the build is complete, it returns the IMAGE ID as shown below.
  • You can use the "docker tag" command to mention a repository and tag to the image. 

  • At this stage, as shown in the above screenshot, the FIO image is created with repository "vineethac/fio_image" and tagged as "latest".
  • You can run this image as given below.

  • # docker run -dit --name FIO_test01 --mount source=disk_data,target=/vol vineethac/fio_image fio --name=RandomReadTest1 --readwrite=randread --rwmixwrite=0 --bs=4k --invalidate=1 --direct=1 --filename=/vol/newfile --size=10g --time_based --runtime=300 --ioengine=libaio --numjobs=2 --iodepth=1 --norandommap --randrepeat=0 --exitall


  • The above command will start a container with FIO application running inside it. FIO will use "/vol/newfile" for IO tests. "/vol" is using "disk_data" directory which is inside "/var/lib/docker/volumes". Once the test is complete, the container will exit.

Hope it was useful. Cheers!

Related posts


Docker 101 - Part3 - Persisting data using volumes

Docker 101 - Part2 - Basic operations

Docker 101 - Part1 - Installation