VMware vRealize Operations Essentials
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About this ebook
About This Book
- Extract the optimum performance, availability, and capacity of your IT infrastructure with the help of vRealise Operations Manager
- Leverage the power of strategic reports to drive tactful decision-making within the IT department
- A pragmatic guide to proficiently manage your applications and storage
Who This Book Is For
If you are a vSphere administrator and wish to optimize your virtual environment, this book is your go-to guide on vRealize Operations. As a vSphere administrator, it is assumed that you have a good understanding of both physical and virtual infrastructure. A basic knowledge of application monitoring and log analysis would be useful when we dive into the capabilities of the solution.
What You Will Learn
- Architect, design, and install vRealize Operations
- Migrate from the previous vCenter Operations Manager 5.x version, configure vR Ops policies, and create custom groups
- Use out-of-the-box Dashboards, Views, and Reports and create your own customized Dashboards, Views, and Reports
- Apply the Alerting framework of Symptoms, Recommendations, and Actions, and create your own Alerting content
- Leverage the power of Capacity Planning to maximize the utilization of your virtual infrastructure
- Manage the rest of your infrastructure, including storage and applications, with vRealize Operations Management Packs
- Extend the solution with vRealize Hyperic and Log Insight
In Detail
This book will enable you to deliver on the operational disciplines of Performance, Health, Capacity, Configuration, and Compliance by making the best use of solutions provided by vRealize Operations. Starting with architecture, design, and sizing, we will ensure your implementation of vRealize Operations is a success.
We will dive into the utilization of a solution to manage your vSphere infrastructure.
Then, we will employ out-of-the-box Dashboards and the very powerful Views and Reporting functionality of vRealize Operations to create your custom dashboards and address your reporting requirements.
Next, we go through the Alerting framework and how Symptoms, Recommendations, and Actions are used to achieve efficient operations. Later you will master the topic of Capacity Planning, where we look at how important it is to craft appropriate policies to match your requirements, and we’ll consider attitude toward capacity risk, which will aid you to build future project requirements into your capacity plans.
Finally, we will look at extending the solution to manage Storage, Applications, and other IT infrastructures using Management Packs from Solution Exchange, as well as how the solution can be enhanced with the integration of Log Insight.
Style and approach
This book is a pragmatic, step-by-step guide that will quickly build your knowledge of the key capabilities of vRealize Operations. As well as learning about the solution, we will provide you with real-world examples that will help you customize and enhance your virtual environment.
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VMware vRealize Operations Essentials - Steiner Matthew
Table of Contents
VMware vRealize Operations Essentials
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
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Support files, eBooks, discount offers, and more
Why subscribe?
Free access for Packt account holders
Instant updates on new Packt books
Preface
What this book covers
What you need for this book
Who this book is for
Conventions
Reader feedback
Customer support
Downloading the color images of this book
Errata
Piracy
Questions
1. Introduction to vRealize Operations Manager
A look at vRealize Operations Manager
Operational disciplines addressed by vRealize Operations
Performance
Analytics
Content
Dynamic thresholds and hard thresholds
Capacity
Capacity models
Capacity projects
Configuration and compliance
Architecture, scalability, and resilience
Appliance nodes and components
Architecture
Scalability
vRealize Operations editions and licensing
Editions
vRealize Operations Standard Edition
vRealize Operations Advanced Edition
vRealize Operations Enterprise Edition
Licensing
Mixing licensing
Summary
2. Install, Configure, and Administer vRealize Operations Manager
Planning for installation
Product compatibility
Architecture
Sizing
Overall Scaling Table
Sizing Guide – basic
Sizing Guide – advanced
Scaling up and scaling out
High Availability
Installing vRealize Operations Manager
Deploy the vRealize Operations nodes
Establish the cluster
Creating the Master node
Add Data nodes
Configure High Availability
Starting the cluster
Finalizing initial configuration
Configure the vSphere solution
Configuring the vCenter adapter
Configuring the vCenter Python Adapter
Defining monitoring goals
Migrating from vCenter Operations 5.8.x
Configuring groups and policies
Policies
Base Settings policy
Other policies
Default policy
Creating a new policy
Custom groups
Creating a Custom Group and applying a policy
Managing vRealize Operations
Administration panel
Admin UI
Summary
3. Dashboards, Badges, and Widgets
The vRealize Operations UI
Orientation and navigation
Home screen
Alerts
Environment
Groups and applications
Inventory Trees
Content
Administration
Object search
Dashboards overview
Recommendations dashboard
Badges
Health badge
Risk badge
Efficiency badge
Badge state
Object Details dashboard
Summary tab
Alerts
Analysis
Troubleshooting
Symptoms
Timeline
Events
All Metrics
Details
Environment
Projects
Reports
Out-of-the-box and Custom dashboards
Anatomy of a Custom dashboard
vSphere Solution dashboards
Widgets
Selection widgets
Visualization widgets
The View widget
Other widgets
Exploring the New Custom Dashboard workspace
Summary
4. Views and Reports
An overview of Views and Reports
Views
Building Custom Views
The List View
Preview source
The Trend View
Distribution View
Other Views
Refining Views
Managing Views
Using Views in Dashboards
Reports
Built-in Reports
Creating and scheduling reports
Creating reports on an ad hoc basis
Scheduling reports
Building a Report Template
Managing reports
Summary
5. Alerts, Symptoms, Recommendations, and Actions
Alerts overview
Alerts and content
Alert Definitions
Symptom Definitions
Symptom Criticality
Metric/Property Symptom Definitions
Creating a metric symptom
Property Symptom Definitions
Creating a Property Symptom Definition
Message Event Symptom Definitions
Fault Symptom Definitions
Metric Event Symptom Definitions
Recommendations
Creating a Recommendation
Actions
Alerts
vSphere Hardening Guidelines alerts
Creating a new Alert Definition
Viewing and managing Alerts
Viewing Alerts
Managing Alerts
Summary
6. Capacity Planning and Capacity Projects
Capacity planning for virtual infrastructure
Principles of Demand and Allocation capacity planning models
Resource dimensions
Overallocation
Selecting a capacity planning model
Crafting your Capacity Planning policies
Modifying your Default Policy
Capacity planning dashboards, views, and reports
The Capacity Remaining dashboard
The Time Remaining dashboard
Reclaimable Capacity dashboard
Configuring Policy for Reclaimable Capacity
Summary metrics
Capacity Views and Reports
Virtual Machine views
Host, Datastore, and Cluster views
Capacity Projects
Adding a Capacity Project
Combining and committing Capacity Projects
Other Capacity Project Visualizations
Capacity Projects and days remaining
Summary
7. vRealize Operations Manager Solutions
Management Packs overview
Management Pack types and entitlement
Management Pack content
Solution Exchange
Installing Management Packs
Downloading the Management Pack code and documentation
Installing the Management Pack
Upgrading vRealize Operations
Upgrade Code and Release Notes
Performing the upgrade
Summary
8. vRealize Infrastructure Navigator
Introduction to vRealize Infrastructure Navigator
Architecture
Deployment
Configuring vRealize infrastructure navigator
Licensing the appliance
Configuring the appliance
Installing the Management Pack for vRealize Infrastructure Navigator
Using vRealize Infrastructure Navigator
Service definitions
Application definitions
Manual application definition
Applications in vRealize Operations
Application Group Objects
Virtual Machine metadata
vRealize Infrastructure Navigator dashboards
The VIN Application Topology dashboard
The VIN VM Dependencies dashboard
Summary
9. vRealize Log Insight Integration
Introduction to vRealize Log Insight
Installing vRealize Log Insight
Sizing and design
Appliance installation
Establishing a new deployment
Adding nodes to the cluster
Configuring Integrated Load Balancer
Log ingestion
Logging in
vSphere integration and log ingestion
Syslog ingestion
Collection agents
Installing the Windows agent
Agent groups and agent configuration
Content Packs
Adding additional Content Packs
Viewing installed Content Packs
Using Content Pack Agent Groups
Manual configuration
Configuring vRealize Operations Management Content Pack
vRealize Operations Manager integration
Installing the Log Insight Management Pack in vRealize Operations
Configuring the integration in vRealize Log Insight
Using vRealize Log Insight with vRealize Operations Manager
Orientation
Dashboards
Interactive analysis
Creating alerts to be sent to vRealize Operations Manager
Scenario
Creating alert
Viewing alerts in vRealize Operations
Launching in context from vRealize Operations Manager
Summary
10. End Point Operations
Introduction to End Point Operations
Licensing
Deploying End Point Operations
Deploying the Windows agent
Viewing your End Points in vRealize Operations
Service monitoring in Windows
End Point Operations Solution Packs
Implementing Solution Packs
Viewing your application end points in vRealize Operations
MS SQL dashboard
Policies and End Point Operations
Summary
Index
VMware vRealize Operations Essentials
VMware vRealize Operations Essentials
Copyright © 2015 Packt Publishing
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles or reviews.
Every effort has been made in the preparation of this book to ensure the accuracy of the information presented. However, the information contained in this book is sold without warranty, either express or implied. Neither the author, nor Packt Publishing, and its dealers and distributors will be held liable for any damages caused or alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by this book.
Packt Publishing has endeavored to provide trademark information about all of the companies and products mentioned in this book by the appropriate use of capitals. However, Packt Publishing cannot guarantee the accuracy of this information.
First published: December 2015
Production reference: 1211215
Published by Packt Publishing Ltd.
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Birmingham B3 2PB, UK.
ISBN 978-1-78528-475-5
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Credits
Author
Matthew Steiner
Reviewers
James Bowling
Rebecca Fitzhugh
Brian Ragazzi
Commissioning Editor
Ashwin Nair
Acquisition Editor
Shaon Basu
Content Development Editor
Dharmesh Parmar
Technical Editor
Namrata Patil
Copy Editors
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Merilyn Pereira
Project Coordinator
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Proofreader
Safis Editing
Indexer
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Graphics
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Production Coordinator
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Cover Work
Aparna Bhagat
Foreword
Automators – the future kingmakers
Scale.
The future is always about scale—bigger, faster, and stronger.
As we sit here in a time when, once again, both application and infrastructure architectures are shifting, a trend emerges, and this time it is automation. IT has always been about building bigger; something I continually talk to customers about is how they need to look backwards to look forwards. Look at what you were doing 5 years ago in IT; it is very different from now. Now, you are doing more: managing more machines, supporting more applications, embracing more technologies, developing more business models, and simply put—more. Look 5 years ahead from now and there is even more.
However, you only have one pair of hands. So the answer is automation. Each growth phase in architecture drives you to abstract yourself up one layer and find ways of simplifying to stay ahead. Skills that used to be valuable, such as racking servers and plugging them in (where I started!), become commoditized. Now, building and managing individual VMs is also becoming an activity that is undifferentiated as architectures move to microservices and scale-out decoupled layers instead of the classic tightly coupled stacks.
The future kingmakers are those who can build those layers, automate them to within an inch of their lives and communicate through APIs.
The future belongs to those that can say to applications' teams, I've got an API for that.
As someone who has picked up this book, you have already realized that, and are taking the right steps and are building your own future.
Enjoy.
Joe Baguley
VP & Chief Technology Officer
VMware EMEA
About the Author
Matthew Steiner is an experienced presales consultant with a career stretching back over 25 years in the IT industry, the last 16 years of which have been spent providing presales support for technology vendors.
He started his career as a PC engineer in the North East of England and then spent 7 years providing technical support and working on IT projects for The Royal Bank of Scotland.
In 2000, he moved into presales, first with Compaq and then HP and IBM, working with both x86 and UNIX architectures before moving into the software industry with VMware. He is currently a Lead Systems Engineer (SE) at VMware and has spent the last 3 years as a Cloud Management Platform Specialist SE. His focus is on vRealize Operations for which he is the presales lead in the UK.
Apart from the 'day job', providing technical sales support, Matthew is a regular contributor and speaker at events and conferences such as VMworld and local VMware User Groups (VMUGs), and is VMware's technical sponsor for the Scottish VMUG.
This is Matthew's first book, although he has also authored two Hands on Labs for VMware as well as white papers and other training materials throughout his career. He also maintains a blog at SEinTheCloud.wordpress.com, where he writes about his experiences as a presales consultant and the technologies he is working with.
Thank you to Jayne for putting up with me spending many evenings and weekends writing, and thank you to our cats, Lizzie and Smithy, for distracting me at times and standing on my keyboard!
Also, thank you to all my colleagues who helped me with ideas and support, particularly Peter Von Oven, who initially inspired me to write, and has mentored me through the process. Thanks also to the VMware OneCloud and Hands on Labs teams, without those environments I could not have written this book.
About the Reviewers
Rebecca Fitzhugh is an independent VMware consultant and VMware Certified Instructor whose primary focus is on architecting vSphere, vRealize, and Horizon infrastructures. She is a VMware vExpert and has obtained multiple levels of certification (VCP/VCAP), acquiring nearly 10 years of experience. Prior to becoming an instructor and consultant, Rebecca served 5 years in the United States Marine Corps where she assisted in the build-out and administration of multiple enterprise networks residing on virtual infrastructure. Her book, vSphere Virtual Machine Management, was published by Packt Publishing. You can follow her on Twitter at @rebeccafitzhugh.
Brian Ragazzi has been in the IT industry for more than 15 years, with experience of a wide variety of hardware, application delivery, data center virtualization, application development, cloud advisory services, and software engineering. He holds several certifications from Citrix, EMC, Microsoft, and VMware.
Brian has reviewed and contributed to VMware vRealize Orchestrator Cookbook as well as numerous white papers and solution guides.
He is a Cloud Solutions Consulting engineer at EMC, currently working with the EMC Federation Enterprise Hybrid Cloud solution, and specializes in Software Defined Data Center, IT automation, and day-2 operations.
Brian can be found online at http://brianragazzi.com or on Twitter @BrianPRagazzi.
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Preface
At VMware, we often talk about our clients' experiences with our technologies as journeys that they undertake.
The original journey was all about Virtualization; people started with virtualization first in their IT Department trying this magical new technology, before using it in Testing and Development and then in Production. The final step of their journey was to virtualize everything, including the most critical applications on which their business runs.
Now we are on a new journey, this time, to the Cloud. There are many different definitions of 'Cloud', but they share some common characteristics, such as:
Pooling: This is the pooling of hardware resources so they can be shared as needed
Elasticity: Leveraging the pooled resources to allow workloads to grow and shrink to meet demand as required in real time
Automation: Everything in the cloud should be automated and fast; there should be no more waiting for administrators to spin up workloads or install applications
Self Service: Consumers of cloud technology should be able to request the resources they want via a self-service portal or an API
Regardless of whether you are operating a private, public, or a hybrid cloud, you can expect to see these characteristics in place.
The technology that delivers on these cloud promises is a Cloud Management Platform (CMP), and VMware's CMP has three elements:
vRealize Operations: This is a solution delivering on the operational disciplines required to operate your cloud.
vRealize Automation: This has the capability to automate the creation and deletion of objects and workloads during their lifecycle in your cloud. This also includes a self-service portal and an API as well as governance in the form of approvals.
vRealize Business: This provides visibility into the costs of running the workloads and services in your cloud.
This book is about the vRealize Operations part of VMware's CMP and will take you on a journey to understand how vRealize Operations can be used to deliver the operational disciplines demanded of today's cloud administrators.
What this book covers
Chapter 1, Introduction to vRealize Operations Manager, introduces the reader to vRealize Operations, providing an overview of its capabilities and architecture. Packaging and licensing will also be looked at in this chapter.
Chapter 2, Install, Configure, and Administer vRealize Operations Manager, starts by describing the planning, sizing, and design steps to be undertaken before deploying vRealize Operations Manager. We then go through the process of installing and configuring the solution and look at some of the administrative tasks and requirements.
Chapter 3, Dashboards, Badges, and Widgets, goes through the various elements in the vRealize Operations UI. We will look at the badges that are integral to the dashboards and then the out-of-the-box dashboards themselves. Finally, we will look at custom dashboards and the widgets that they are composed of.
Chapter 4, Views and Reports, examines the reporting capability of vRealize Operations. First, we will look at Views, including how to use the workspace to create your own custom views. Next, we will cover how these views can be combined to create reports that can be exported for external consumption.
Chapter 5, Alerts, Symptoms, Recommendations, and Actions, looks at the alerting framework within vRealize Operations and how content is provided in the form of alerts, symptoms, recommendations, and actions. We will also see how you can create custom alerting content yourself.
Chapter 6, Capacity Planning and Capacity Projects, examines the operational discipline of capacity planning. First, we will look at the capacity models that you can adopt. Next, we will look at capacity badges and dashboards, and finally, at how you can use the Capacity Projects feature to add future workloads to your capacity plans.
Chapter 7, vRealize Operations Manager Solutions, shows how you can extend the capabilities of vRealize Operations by adding Management Packs to manage other parts of your infrastructure. We will look at what is in Management Packs and how they are installed and used. Finally in this chapter, we will look at how you can keep your vRealize Operations solution up to date.
Chapter 8, vRealize Infrastructure Navigator, looks at how you can add visibility of application dependencies to your vRealize Operations implementation. We will go through the installation and configuration of the solution, see how it integrates with vRealize Operations, and how you can group interconnected VMs together.
Chapter 9, vRealize Log Insight Integration, examines how you can add further capability by implementing and integrating vRealize Log Insight. After looking at how you size and plan its deployment, we will show you how the solution is implemented and how it can be easily extended with Content Packs. We will also look at how Log Insight agents can capture additional logs from sources such as Windows Events.
Chapter 10, End Point Operations, covers how you can manage your Operating Systems and Applications through the installation of End Point Operations agents. We will look at the architecture and deployment of End Point Operations and the additional content that it provides.
What you need for this book
General knowledge of operating, managing, and troubleshooting the vSphere platform is essential in order to get the most out of this book. If you are a vSphere administrator, vRealize Operations will be a valuable tool to help you in your day-to-day job and this book will show you how.
The book has a lot of practical exercises in it, taking you through installation and configuration of the various components in the vRealize Operations solution. A home lab or test/development environment would be a good place to start; however, you will find that deploying the solution against a real environment with real workloads running will offer you the best experience.
You will need the following VMware software to work through all the exercises and examples in the book:
vSphere 4.0 U2 or above (full integration with vRealize Operations requires vSphere 5.5 or above)
vRealize Operations 6.1
vRealize Log Insight 3.0
You can download 60 day evaluations of all this software from my.vmware.com.
Who this book is for
If you are a vSphere Administrator and are looking to deploy and use the vRealize Operations solution, this book is the ideal place to start. It will take you through implementing and using the entire solution, including vRealize Operations Manager, vRealize Log Insight, vRealize Infrastructure Navigator, and End Point Operations.
The exercises will also introduce you to customizing the solution to meet your own needs; you will soon be building your own dashboards and creating your own content using the alerting framework.
Conventions
In this book, you will find a number of text styles that distinguish between different kinds of information. Here are some examples of these styles and an explanation of their meaning.
Code words in text, database table names, folder names, filenames, file extensions, pathnames, dummy URLs, user input, and Twitter handles are shown as follows: "Enter the FQDN, Username, and