Found an answer: https://communities.vmware.com/message/2992616?et=watches.email.thread#2992616 new release 8.2 adds Blast support, refer to release notes vRealize Log Insight 8.2 Release Note...
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Found an answer: https://communities.vmware.com/message/2992616?et=watches.email.thread#2992616 new release 8.2 adds Blast support, refer to release notes vRealize Log Insight 8.2 Release Notes VMware Horizon 4.0 VMware Horizon 7.x and BLAST desktop protocol support New General – Performance and General – Availability dashboards
In VMware PSC-6.7 (and 6.5) we now have a Certificate Authority we can use to generate certificates for vCenter and ESXi-hosts. Is it also possible to generate certificates there for vRLI and ...
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In VMware PSC-6.7 (and 6.5) we now have a Certificate Authority we can use to generate certificates for vCenter and ESXi-hosts. Is it also possible to generate certificates there for vRLI and vROM, for example? For another custom subordinate CA even? To use VMCA as a normal intermediate CA? Is it "not recommended"? What do you think? Every document I can find is explaining only the use of VMCA for vCenter and ESXi certs replacement.
Oh, you mean "appliance deployment from OVF". Well, probably you can't use "thick eager zeroed" from the deployment GUI, but you can convert the resulting VMDK file in different ways, for exam...
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Oh, you mean "appliance deployment from OVF". Well, probably you can't use "thick eager zeroed" from the deployment GUI, but you can convert the resulting VMDK file in different ways, for example from the command-line: vmkfstools --eagerzero /vmfs/volumes/DatastoreName/VMName/VMName.vmdk See the article Enabling clustering features for an existing virtual disk by converting in place (1035823) | VMware KB More info on vmkfstools: Converting a Zeroedthick Virtual Disk to an Eagerzeroedthick Disk https://ryanmangansitblog.com/2013/03/19/converting-a-lazy-zeroed-disk-to-eagerly/
Or, depending on your goals, you might create two virtual disks on different SANs and combine them into RAID1 ("mirror") at guest OS level (I'd not recommend this way though).
No, datastore cluster is not your choice for such a functionality. You would, probably, like to look at native storage array sync functionality (they usually have those) or at vSphere Replicat...
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No, datastore cluster is not your choice for such a functionality. You would, probably, like to look at native storage array sync functionality (they usually have those) or at vSphere Replication. Or maybe vSAN feature.
Still, you can replicate as many VMs with one vSphere Replication appliance as you'd like. There are settings for every such replication to create point-in-time snapshots too.
You need 1 vCenter Server license and N vSphere Standard licenses (where N is the total number of physical CPUs (sockets, not cores) in your 4 servers). There is also "Standard Acceleration kit"...
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You need 1 vCenter Server license and N vSphere Standard licenses (where N is the total number of physical CPUs (sockets, not cores) in your 4 servers). There is also "Standard Acceleration kit", that contains 1 vCenter Server license and 6 vSphere licenses (AFAIR) and you can buy additional vSphere licenses if needed. You will have all necessary capabilities, you have asked for.