Building a VMware Cloud Foundation Lab: Part 4 – SDDC Bringup

This is probably the most important post of this series. In this post we will learn how to bring up the SDDC i.e the Management Domain deployment.

Before we start the process we need to have the vCF 3.7.x cloud builder ova handy which can be downloaded from here

Cloud Builder deployment is pretty much straight forward.  Not covering the steps of deployment as nothing fancy there. Once the cloud builder vm boots up, open console of the vm to fetch the URL to access UI.

Download and Complete Deployment Parameter Sheet

Before we do anything in Cloud Builder UI, we need to prepare the deployment parameter sheet. This sheet can be downloaded from same location from where you downloaded the cloud builder ova.

There are various entries that needs to be filled up in the deployment sheet. This sheet needs to be filled very carefully as mistakes can lead to deployment failure or incorrect deployment.Read More

Building a VMware Cloud Foundation Lab: Part 3 – Esxi Host Deployment & Configuration

In last Post of this series, I talked about the DNS records and IP Pools that should be in place for a successful vCF deployment.

In this post I will walk through steps needed to create nested Esxi and post installation steps.

Before we plan to create nested Esxi hosts or physical, we need to identify the build/version of Esxi and other components that are compatible with a given vCF version. VMware KB-52520 help you identify this.

For vCF 3.7 please refer to below table for build number needed. 

Once I had build info handy, I deployed 4 nested ESXi hosts for the management workload domain. These VMs were created with following specifications:

  • 10 vCPUs
  • 64 GB Memory
  • 4 Hard disks (Thin Provisioned): 16 GB (Boot disk0), 100 GB (vSAN cache tier), 150 GB, 150 GB (vSAN capacity tier). 
  • 2 VMXNET3 NICs connected to the same Portgroup
  • Virtual hardware version 14 (compatibility: Esxi 6.7 or later during vm creation)
  • Guest OS: Other
  • Guest OS version: VMware ESXi 6.5 or later
  • Expose hardware assisted virtualization to the guest OS enabled
  • EFI firmware

Esxi Host Patching

I initially installed hosts with Esxi 6.7 U1 Build 10302608 (as i had this iso handy) and then patched it to Esxi 6.7 EP 09 Build 3644319.Read More

Building a VMware Cloud Foundation Lab: Part 2 – DNS and IP Pools

When you are planning for a vCF deployment, you need lot and lot of IP’s and DNS records. 

In my environment I have an AD integrated DNS running on MS 2012 R2.

If you are only planning on deploying the Management Workload Domain in your environment you only need to create the forward and reverse lookup records for Management Workload Domain. If Virtual Infrastructure Workload Domain will be introduced in future then you need to plan the DNS records accordingly.

Note: Please see this article for comprehensive list of DNS requirement for vCF deployment.

Below is the list of DNS records that I created in my environment:

Workload Domain Hostname IP Address
Management vcfesx01 172.20.31.101
Management vcfesx02 172.20.31.102
Management vcfesx03 172.20.31.103
Management vcfesx04 172.20.31.104
Management vcf-psc01 172.20.31.105
Management vcf-psc02 172.20.31.106
Management vcf-mgmtvc 172.20.31.107
Management vcf-mgmtnsx 172.20.31.108
Management vcf-sddcmgr 172.20.31.109
Management vcfvrli (iLB) 172.20.31.110
Management vcf-vrli01 172.20.31.111
Management vcf-vrli02 172.20.31.112
Management vcf-vrli03 172.20.31.113
Virtual Infrastructure wld-esxi01 172.20.31.165
Virtual Infrastructure wld-esxi02 172.20.31.166
Virtual Infrastructure wld-esxi03 172.20.31.167
Virtual Infrastructure vcf-wldvc01 172.20.31.168
Virtual Infrastructure vcf-wldnsx01 172.20.31.169
NA vcf (cloud builder appliance) 172.20.31.100
NA vcf-lcm 172.20.31.118

Note: If you are planning to deploy vRealize and Horizon infrastructure using vCF, you need to create additional records as per product DNS requirement. Read More

Building a VMware Cloud Foundation Lab: Part 1 – Infra Preparation

Recently I got chance to do a nested vCF 3.5/3.7 deployment in my lab and it was a great learning. Few friends of mine reached out to me to know more about VMware Cloud Foundation product as a whole and how we can get our hands dirty on it. 

Through this series of articles, I want to share my experience with you on how to do a successful vCF 3.7 deployment in a nested environment.  

What is VMware Cloud Foundation (vCF)?

As per VMware official documentation

VMware Cloud Foundation is an integrated software stack that bundles compute virtualization (VMware vSphere), storage virtualization (VMware vSAN), network virtualization (VMware NSX), and cloud management and monitoring (VMware vRealize Suite) into a single platform that can be deployed on premises as a private cloud or run as a service within a public cloud.

vCF helps you to deploy a true SDDC environment in your infrastructure by following the VMware Validated Design recommendations and makes the life cycle management of SDDC very easy.Read More