VMware has announced the general availability of VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 3.9.1, introducing support for Application Virtual Networks, API support for multiple physical NICs and vSphere Distributed switches, and improvements to Cloud Builder and Developer Center.
Application Virtual Networks
Application Virtual Networks (AVN) are software-defined overlay networks that lay the foundation for supporting workload mobility use-cases such as planned migration or disaster recovery. To learn more about AVNs and how it can benefit organizations, please review this blog post on Application Virtual Networks.
New installations of Cloud Foundation 3.9.1 will require setting up AVN at deploy time. This, in turn, paves the way for a simpler transition as we migrate from NSX-v to NSX-T support in the management domain in upcoming releases.
Existing Cloud Foundation customers can elect to set up AVN support at the time of upgrade to 3.9.1. At this time, it is recommended that customers contact VMware Support for assistance in configuring AVNs.
API support for multiple pNICs and vSphere Distributed Switches
The VMware Cloud Foundation API now supports up to three vSphere Distributed switches and six physical NICs, providing more flexibility to support high-performance use cases and physical traffic separation.
Cloud Builder: Updates UI and Deployment Report
The UI for Cloud Builder has had a significant update to improve the workflow experience. For example, choosing the workflow types has been moved from the OVA settings into the main UI wizard. There’s a new progress bar, greater feedback, and can navigate more easily through the workflows.
Cloud Builder now produces a detailed report of all the steps completed and which configurations have been set. This is useful in several ways; for example, it helps explain all the actions that are being automated by the tool so there’s a greater environmental understanding, and it produces a documented site-specific configuration of the newly deployed SDDC.
Developer Center
Now Cloud Foundation APIs and code samples can now be accessed directly from the SDDC Manager Dashboard. This allows users to run the API against the current VCF instance for easy testing of scripts. Users can search by functionality or use-cases to get to code snippets and examples on API use.
Additional Updates
In VCF 3.9.1, there is now support for L3 vSAN in stretched and unstretched configurations for VCF with VxRail. This enables increased availability with minimal downtime and data loss.
There are also enhancements to password management for VxRail Manager and ESX. You can now update or rotate the password for the root and mystic users of the VxRail Manager and the root user of ESXi hosts using the SDDC Manager.
VCF now supports SSO Management Domain Convergence for VxRail. This provides the ability to link between the SSOs (PSCs) of two or more VMware Cloud Foundation instances so that the management and the VI workload domains are visible in each of the instances.
VCF 3.9.1 provides key new functionality and adds important capabilities to establish private and hybrid cloud automation, networking and lifecycle management for modern and traditional application environments. To learn more, please review the VCF 3.9.1 Release Notes and VCF documentation.
Cloud Foundation Bill of Materials (BOM)
The Cloud Foundation software product is comprised of the following software Bill-of-Materials (BOM). The components in the BOM are interoperable and compatible.
Nakivo has released its new Backup and Replication solution Nakivo v10.8, which includes support for…
Oracle Cloud VMware Solution (OCVS) provides a customer-managed, native VMware-based cloud environment hosted in Oracle…
Vinchin is a professional provider of data protection solutions for enterprises. It provides a series…
In my previous blog post, I have explained about VMware Cloud Disaster Recovery (VCDR) Onboarding and…
vRealize Network Insight helps you build an optimized, highly available, and secure network infrastructure across…
Can you believe it's here again? SysAdmin Day is back, and with it comes endless gratitude…