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VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook

You're reading from   VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook If you prefer practice to theory then this is the ideal book for learning how to install and configure VMware vSphere components. Packed with recipes, it's a hands-on tutorial and reference guide for this unbeatable virtualization product.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849684026
Length 466 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Abhilash G B Abhilash G B
Author Profile Icon Abhilash G B
Abhilash G B
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Upgrading to vSphere 5.1 FREE CHAPTER 2. Performing a Fresh Installation of vSphere 5.1 3. vSphere Auto Deploy 4. ESXi Image Builder 5. Creating and Managing VMFS Datastores 6. Managing iSCSI and NFS Storage 7. Profile-driven Storage and Storage I/O Control 8. Configuring the vSphere Network 9. Creating and Managing Virtual Machines 10. Configuring vSphere HA 11. Configuring vSphere DRS, DPM, and VMware EVC 12. Upgrading and Patching using vSphere Update Manager 13. Using vSphere Management Assistant (vMA 5.1) Index

Creating a vSphere Standard Switch


vSwitches operate at the VMkernel layer. Unlike most of the physical switches in a modern environment, a vSwitch is not a managed switch. However, it does know the MAC addresses of the virtual machine adapters mapped to it.

By default, a vSwitch—vSwitch0—is created during the ESXi installation.

How to do it...

To manually create a new vSwitch, you can use the vSphere Web Client GUI, the vSphere Windows Client GUI, or the esxcfg-vswitch command.

There is one fundamental difference in the process of creating a vSwitch using the esxcfg-vswitch command. Unlike the Add Networking wizard, which requires you to create a port group to proceed with the creating of the vSwitch, the esxcfg-vswitch command lets you create a vSwitch with no port groups and with no uplinks.

When a vSwitch is created it will have 128 ports by default. The number of ports per vSwitch is configurable up to a maximum of 4096 ports.

Using vSphere Web Client

The following procedure explains how to...

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