Troubleshoot VMware NSX Edge Services Issues

Troubleshoot VPN service issues

There are 3 types of VPN which you can configure on NSX edges:

  • SSL-VPN Plus
  • IPSec VPN
  • L2 VPN

Lets start with troubleshooting IPSec VPN.

To troubleshoot any VPN issues, you should have knowledge of how to configure a VPN service so that you can verify that issue is not because of a mis-configured settings. To review the implementation and configuration of the IPSec VPN service refer to article

To run troubleshooting commands on the ESG where IPSec VPN service is configured, connect to the edge via SSH.

To view full list of commands for ipsec, run command: show service ipsec ? 

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Check IPSec VPN service status: show service ipsec

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To see IPSec configuration  run command: show config ipsec

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Additionally you can configure the ESG (where IPSec is configured) to forward logs to a centralized syslog server.

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Once syslog server is configured on ESG, you will find following log files forwarded to the syslog server.Read More

Troubleshoot VMware NSX Connectivity Issues

Monitor and analyze virtual machine traffic with Flow Monitoring

Flow monitoring is used to capture ingress/egress traffic of VM’s in a NSX environment. Flow monitoring is disabled by default and you need to enable it before you can use this tool. Once Flow monitoring is enabled, you need to wait for some time to let this tool gather data about your vSphere environment (much like how vROPS gather data before generating reports/recommendations etc)

Flow monitoring can be enabled by navigating to Networking & Security > Flow Monitoring > Configuration and clicking on Enable. 

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Under Flow Exclusion, you can exclude any object which you don’t want to monitor. For example, you can select option “destination” under Exclusion Settings and click on + button to specify a destination container for which flow monitoring data won’t be gathered. 

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Flow Monitoring Dashboard

Here you can see Top Flows, Top Destinations and Top Sources of your environment. Read More

Troubleshoot Common VMware NSX Installation/Configuration Issues

Troubleshoot NSX Manager Services

If you are facing any NSX related issues, then NSX manager UI is the first place to verify which service or services are impacted. Typically you can check status of following services from NSX Manager UI (https://NSX-FQDN/login.jsp)

  • vPostgres 
  • RabbitMQ: 
  • NSX Management Service
  • NSX Universal Synchronization Service (Only when you have Cross vCenter NSX Configured)

If any service is in stopped state, try to start or restart it.

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You can also check logs from NSX manager CLI to determine what is broken. The two important logs you can check are: NSX Manager log and the System log. These logs can be viwed by firing commands: show log manager & show log system. You can append the word follow to watch the logs in real time (similar to linux tail command)

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If any of the service is crashing, or not starting, you can check the bottom of the log to see the latest entries and it should give you more information on why it’s not starting.Read More

Configure and Manage Universal Logical Security Objects in NSX

Configure Universal MAC Sets

 

In NSX version lower than 5.4, Mac sets can be created by navigating to Networking and Security, Select the Primary NSX Manager > Manage > Grouping Objects > MAC Sets.

In NSX 6.4 this is available under Networking & Security > Groups and Tags > MAC Sets.

Click on + button to add a new MAC Set.

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Provide a name for the MAC set and add the mac addresses that will be part of the universal MAC set. Make sure to check mark the option “Mark this object for Universal Synchronisation”.

In NSX 6.4 you will not get this option. You just have to toggle the “Universal Synchronization” option. Hit Add button post adding your MAC addresses.

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This MAC set will now be available in your secondary NSX manager also.

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You can use this MAC set while creating distributed firewall rules for Layer 2.Read More

Configuring VMware Cross vCenter NSX-Part 2

Create/configure Universal Logical Switches (ULS)

Any Logical Switches created in a Universal Transport Zone are Universal Logical Switches and it provides Layer 2 connectivity across VC boundaries. You can connect 2 VM’s that are running in different vCenter instance to a ULS and can ping across.

Universal Logical Switches can only be created on the Primary NSX Manager and once created, they are Synced to secondary NSX Manager . 

To create a universal LS, login to vCenter Web Client and navigate to Networking & Security > Logical Switches and select Primary NSX manager from the drop down and click on + button.

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Provide a name for the ULS and make sure to attach it to universal transport zone else it will be created as a local LS. 

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I created 2 universal LS for a 3-Tier app in my lab.

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Let’s test the connectivity between the VM’s.

I have 2 VM’s named ‘Universal-App-01’ and ‘Universal-DB-01’ and they are currently connected to my management network and have IP’s 172.18.10.2 and 172.18.10.3 respectively.Read More

Configuring VMware Cross-vCenter NSX

What is Cross vCenter NSX?

Cross-vCenter NSX feature was introduced in NSX 6.2 and it allows central management of network virtualization and security policies across multiple vCenter Server systems. In a cross-vCenter NSX environment, you can have multiple vCenter Servers, each of which must be paired with its own NSX Manager. One NSX Manager is assigned the role of primary NSX Manager, and the others are assigned the role of secondary NSX Manager.

Cross vCenter NSX components

Cross vCenter NSX introduces universal objects; such as:

  • Universal Controller Cluster (UCC)
  • Universal Transport Zone (UTZ)
  • Universal Logical Switch (ULS)
  • Universal Distributed Logical Router (UDLR)
  • Universal IP Set/MAC Set
  • Universal Security Group/Service/Service Group
  • Universal distributed firewall rules.

In a Cross vCenter NSX architecture, all universal objects are created on primary NSX manager and it is then synchronized to all secondary NSX managers via the Universal Synchronization Service. This service only runs on primary NSX manager.Read More

Configure Role Based Access Control in NSX

Role Based Access Control is a mechanism for controlling access and restricting actions of users by adding user accounts to groups that have delegated permissions. The NSX Manager has its own authentication database and permission roles you can assign to users.

In this post we will learn how to configure role based access in NSX. 

Implement identity service support for Active Directory, NIS, and LDAP with SSO

To be frank this topic is very confusing and I am not sure what VMware intends us to do here. One use case of associating NSX with Active Directory is that you can use identity based firewall. And may be associating NSX with AD is what VMware might meant by this topic.

To add AD authentication to NSX, login to vCenter Web Client and navigate to Networking & Security > NSX Managers and click on the NSX Manager where you to add AD authentication and select Domains tab.Read More

Monitor a VMware NSX Implementation

Configure logging for NSX components according to a deployment plan

 

1: Configure Syslog on NSX Manager

To configure NSX manager to send logs to a centralized syslog server, login to NSX manager UI and click on “Manage Appliance Settings”

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Under Syslog server click on Edit button

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Punch in your syslog server IP and port 514 and select UDP as protocol and hit OK.

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Post configuring syslog on NSX manager, I verified that it is forwarding the logs to syslog manager.

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Configure Syslog on NSX Controllers

There is no method available from GUI to set syslog settings on NSX controller and you can only set it via Rest API. The steps of configuring syslog on controllers via Rest API is explained on page 57 of NSX API Guide

1: Get a list of deployed controllers: You can fire below API call to get list of all the deployed controllers

You will get details of all the deployed controllers (if you have more than one).Read More

Backup and Restore NSX Manager

Like any other infrastructure componet, backup of NSX manager is very critical as it helps in recovering configuration in event of a NSX manager corruption/failure etc.

Before software defined networking was introduced, backup of network configuration was a very cumbersome task as you have many components to backup such as Routers, Switches,Firewalls and what not. 

With introduction of NSX, all the networking intelligence were injected in NSX and this reduced the administrative overhead of backing up each networking components individually. With NSX you only have to worry about backing up NSX manager and the vDS at vCenter level which stores all your virtualwires. In this post we will learn how to backup NSX manager and distributed switches.

Configure NSX Manager Backup

To configure backup of NSX manager, login to NSX manager UI (https://NSX-FQDN/) and click on Backup & Restore option from home page.

You can send NSX manager backups to a remote FTP or SFTP server.Read More

Configure and Manage NSX Edge Gateway Services (DHCP, DNS and NAT)

In this post I will be covering objective 3.3 of VCAP6-NV Deploy exam and we will discuss about following topics:

  • Configure DHCP services according to a deployment plan:
    • Create/edit a DHCP IP Pool
    • Create/edit DHCP Static Binding
    • Configure DHCP relay
  • Configure DNS services
  • Configure NAT services to provide access to services running on privately addressed virtual machines

Lets get started.

Configure DHCP services on NSX Edge

NSX Edge Service Gateway provides IP addressing  using static address and via DHCP. In general any DHCP server needs a pool of IP which can be distributed to clients which boots over network and ask for IP via DHCP. Edge gateway is not different. Edge gateway DHCP can provide IP address, default gateway, netmask and DNS server to the DHCP clients which boots over network.

Create/Edit a DHCP IP Pool

Double click on NSX edge on which you want to configure DHCP and navigate to Manage > DHCP > Pools and click on + button to add a new IP pool.Read More