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VMware vRealize Orchestrator Cookbook

You're reading from   VMware vRealize Orchestrator Cookbook Master the configuration, programming, and interaction of plugins with Orchestrator to efficiently automate your VMware infrastructure

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784392246
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniel Langenhan Daniel Langenhan
Author Profile Icon Daniel Langenhan
Daniel Langenhan
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing and Configuring Orchestrator FREE CHAPTER 2. Optimizing Orchestrator Configuration 3. Visual Programming 4. Working with Plugins 5. Basic Orchestrator Operations 6. Advanced Operations 7. Working with VMware Infrastructure Index

What you need for this book

This book covers a lot of ground and discusses the interactions with a lot of other infrastructure services such as AD, e-mail, the vSphere infrastructure, and vRealize Automation.

You can use this book with Orchestrator versions 5.0, 5.1, and 5.5 as well as with the renamed version, vRealize Orchestrator (5.5.2.x, 6.0, and newer).

The requirements differ from chapter to chapter. For Chapter 1, Installing and Configuring Orchestrator, and Chapter 2, Optimizing Orchestrator Configuration, you just require some space on your virtual infrastructure to deploy Orchestrator and maybe a working vCenter. Everything in Chapter 3, Visual Programming, can be accomplished with only the Orchestrator appliance; however, it's more fun with a vCenter around. Chapter 4, Working with Plugins, will require some more infrastructure such as e-mail, AD, REST, SOAP, SNMP, and AMQP. Chapter 5, Basic Orchestrator Operations, and Chapter 6, Advanced Operations, require mostly only Orchestrator and a working vCenter structure. For Chapter 7, Working with VMware Infrastructure, you will require a fully operational vCenter. A vRealize Automation installation is only needed if you are planning to use this product.

Some readers might not have all the resources or infrastructure to rebuild or play with some of the recipes; however, I'm sometimes in the same boat. As a consultant, I travel a lot, so while writing this book, I used this little mini lab. It isn't fast or fancy but it does the trick.

My mini lab consists of a laptop with Windows 7 Pro and VMware Workstation 10 on an Intel i7 quad core (3.4 GHz) with 8 GB RAM. My base VMs look like this:

Name

Content

Virtual hardware

ADDNS

AD, DNS, MS SQL (vCenter, hmail, Orchestrator), hmail, RabbitMQ

Windows 2K8R2, 2 vCPU, 2 GB, 40 GB

vCenter

SSO, WebClient, Inventory Service, vCenter, vRA IaaS

Windows 2K8R2, 2 vCPU, 2 GB, 40 GB

WinvCO

Orchestrator, PowerShell, PowerCLI, PowerGui

Windows 2K8R2, 2 vCPU, 2 GB, 40 GB

AppVCO

Orchestrator appliance

SLES, 2 vCPU, 2 GB, 40 GB

vESXi

Virtual ESXi

ESXi, 2 vCPU, 6 GB, 4 GB

vRA

vRA Appliance

SLES, 2vCPU, 6 GB, 55 GB

Tip

The trick is to choose the minimum amount of VMs to power on at the same time.

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