With the launch of vSphere™ 4, a new certification will be available. The VMware Certified Professional (VCP) on vSphere™4 beta exam will be available 30 days post GA. Candidates eligible for the beta exam will be contacted directly by VMware.
Paths to VMware Certified Professional on vSphere 4
Thursday, April 30. 2009
VMware Certified Professional on vSphere 4
Tuesday, April 28. 2009
Fault Tolerance Checklist
Monday, April 27. 2009
Distributed Virtual Port Groups and Distributed Virtual Uplinks
Distributed Virtual Port Groups (DV Port Groups) are port groups associated with a vDS and specify port configuration options for each member port. DV Port Groups define how a connection is made through the vDS to the Network. Configuration parameters are similar to those available with Port Groups on Standard Switches. The VLAN ID, traffic shaping parameters, port security, teaming and load balancing configuration, and other settings are configured here.
Distributed Virtual Uplinks (dvUplinks) are a new concept introduced with vDS. dvUplinks provide a level of abstraction for the physical NICs (vmnics) on each host. NIC teaming, load balancing, and failover policies on the vDS and DV Port Groups are applied to the dvUplinks and not the vmnics on individual hosts. Each vmnic on each host is mapped to a dvUplinks, permitting teaming and failover consistency irrespective of vmnic assignments. This is illustrated in the following Jing movie.
Continue reading "Distributed Virtual Port Groups and Distributed..." »The VMware vSphere 4 : What’s New Course
I’m in the middle of delivering the “VMware vSphere 4 : What’s New” course. This hands-on training explores the new features of vSphere 4 as well as how to upgrade to vSphere 4. I made a little movie with my Mino Flip. In this video you’ll see the complete vmguru.nl crew. :-)
At the end of the day, Erik Scholten a Solution Architect for Centric Managed ICT Services, interviewed me about my about the first vSphere training day. You can watch the complete interview here.
Sunday, April 26. 2009
vSphere vCenter Database and the IBM DB2 Express-C
DB2 Express-C 9.5.2 (free to develop, free to deploy, free to distribute) contains a full-function DB2 data server, which provides an entry-level product for the Small and Medium Business (SMB) market. It comes with simplified packaging, and is easy to transparently install from within an application. It is available on Linux and Windows platforms, is fully compatible with, scalable to, and has all the autonomic manageability features of its higher priced family of offerings.
These documents describe how to configure an IBM DB2 v9.5 for Linux, Unix, and Windows (LUW) Data Server to Work with vCenter Server. These configuration tasks are mandatory to use a DB2 database with vCenter Server.
Saturday, April 25. 2009
vNetwork Distributed Switch back-up files
After creating a Distributed Switch I was looking at my storage and noticed a new folder called “.dvsData”. It looks like this folders contains the configuration of the Distributed Switch. I think it will be used when the vCenter server is down. I extracted one of the files so you can take a look at it. 134 :-)
Migrate an Existing Virtual Adapter to a vNetwork Distributed Switch
I’m prepping the upcoming delivery of the “What’s New in VMware vSphere 4” training course. I decided to migrate the existing virtual adapters like the kernel port group and the service console port group from a vNetwork Standard Switch to a vNetwork Distributed Switch. I also switched over the virtual machines by configuring virtual machine networking on a vNetwork Distributed Switch.
This is a short walk through from the ESX configuration guide.
Continue reading "Migrate an Existing Virtual Adapter to a..." »Friday, April 24. 2009
VMware Data Recovery Demo
VMware Data Recovery provides complete data protection for your virtual machines. Learn more about VMware Data Recovery at http://www.vmware.com/products/data-recovery/
Wednesday, April 22. 2009
vSphere Regional Event Photos
Photos from all over the World (Aarhus, Austin, Bulgaria, Israel, Lausanne, London , Pune and Palo Alto Behind the Scenes) taken by VMware employees, kicking off the vSphere launch.








EMC PowerPath/VE for VMware vSphere
Chad Sakac, EMC Vice President, VMware Technology Alliance, explains the tight integration between EMC PowerPath/VE and VMware vSphere and points out its dramatic performance and availability potential. Learn how your infrastructure behind vSphere can meet your performance and availability requirements.
PowerPath/VE will be available in June. Pricing starts at $2,100 per physical server for new PowerPath customers and $1,430 for current customers.