Vcenter Multi Hypervisor Manager 10 Guide
Vcenter Multi Hypervisor Manager 10 Guide
Vcenter Multi Hypervisor Manager 10 Guide
EN-000952-00
Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
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Contents
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
Index 45
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About Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments
with vCenter Server
Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server provides information about how to manage third-
party hypervisors in vCenter Server by using VMware vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server also provides information about how to create and
manage virtual machines on third-party hypervisors.
Intended Audience
This information is intended for vSphere system administrators who want to manage third-party hypervisors
by using vCenter Server.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
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Multi-Hypervisor Management in
vCenter Server 1
If you use heterogeneous types of hypervisors to build your virtualization platform, you can use
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager to manage both VMware and third-party hypervisors such as Microsoft
Hyper-V in vCenter Server.
Figure 1-1. vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Components
vSphere Client
vCenter Server
Hyper-V
vCenter
ESX/ ESX/
Multi-Hypervisor Hyper-V
ESXi ESXi
Manager Server
Hyper-V
Third-Party Hypervisor A hypervisor developed by a vendor different than VMware. The type of third-
party hypervisors that you can manage with
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager 1.0 is Microsoft Hyper-V. See “vCenter
Multi-Hypervisor Manager Software Requirements,” on page 10 for details.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
Third-Party Hosts An inventory tree in vCenter Server where you can manage third-party
Inventory hypervisors. When installed and configured, the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager provides the third-party hosts inventory.
You can access the third-party hosts inventory by clicking the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager icon under Inventory in the vSphere
Client. You can add third-party hypervisors to the third-party hosts inventory
and perform management tasks such as create a new virtual machine, change
the power state of virtual machines, change the hardware and software
configuration of virtual machine, and others.
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Installing and Administering
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager 2
To manage third-party hypervisors in vCenter Server, you must install the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and plug-in for the vSphere Client. When installed,
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager provides a separate inventory for third-party hypervisors in
vCenter Server, which you can manage by using the vSphere Client.
n vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Software Requirements on page 10
You can manage third-party hypervisors by using vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager if your system
meets the software requirements for running the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and plug-
in for the vSphere Client.
n vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Deployment Schemes on page 10
You can install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server on the same machine as vCenter Server if
it runs on a Windows OS, or on a remote machine.
n Required Ports for vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager on page 11
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager uses different ports to communicate with vCenter Server, the
vSphere Client, and the third-party hypervisors. You can define most of the port numbers while installing
the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
n Install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Server on page 12
To manage third-party hypervisors by using vCenter Server, first you must install the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server. You can install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
server on the same machine as vCenter Server if it runs on Windows, or on a remote machine.
n Install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Plug-In for the vSphere Client on page 14
After you install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server, you must install the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in for the vSphere Client. The
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in provides a separate inventory tree and management
functionality for third-party hypervisors in the vSphere Client.
n Replace the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Certificate and Configuring a New vCenter Server
Certificate on page 14
You might need to replace the default vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager certificate with a certificate
signed by a certificate authority or with a custom self-signed certificate. In case you have replaced the
vCenter Server certificate, you must pass the thumbprint of the new certificate to the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
n Choosing HTTP or HTTPS Connection Between vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager and Hyper-V
Hosts on page 15
Your decision to use HTTP or HTTPS for communication between vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
server and the Hyper-V hosts depends on whether you want to use a secure or non-secure connection.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server The Windows versions that vCenter Server 5.1 supports. For
a list of the supported Windows operating systems, see the
VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager client The Windows versions that the vSphere Client 5.1 supports.
For a list of the supported Windows operating systems, see
the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/
When the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is installed on the same machine as vCenter Server, it
communicates with the vSphere Client through the vCenter Server proxy.
Figure 2-1. vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Server Is Installed on the Same Machine as vCenter Server
HTTPS/443
vCenter Server
HTTP/80 Proxy
HTTP HTTP
8088 8090
When vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is installed on a different machine than vCenter Server, it
communicates through a direct HTTP or HTTPS connection with the vSphere Client.
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Chapter 2 Installing and Administering vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
Figure 2-2. vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Is Installed on a Different Machine than vCenter Server
HTTPS/8090
vSphere Client vCenter Multi-Hypervisor
HTTP/8088 Manager Server
NOTE If vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is installed on a different machine than vCenter Server,
you must enable the firewall on the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server machine for a direct connection.
vCenter Server proxy 443 HTTP The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server
and plug-in communicate through the
vCenter Server proxy when the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and
vCenter Server are installed on the same
machine.
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server 8090 HTTP The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server
and plug-in communicate through a direct
8090 HTTPS HTTP or HTTPS connection when the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and
vCenter Server are installed on different
machines.
WinRM server and client 1.1 and earlier 80 HTTP Used for communication between the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and
443 HTTPS the Hyper-V hosts.
WinRM server and client 2.0 5985 HTTP
5986 HTTPS
The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager components communicate with each other on different ports. You
can configure HTTPS ports to the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager components to use a secure connection.
For more information about how to enable HTTPS
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor
Manager Plug-In
HTTPS HTTP
8090 8088
HTTPS
443
Hyper-V Hyper-V
Running Running
WinRM 1.1 WinRM 2.0
and earlier
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have an account with administrative privileges on the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the Windows Remote Management service is running and configured on the vCenter Server
machine and the machine where you install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
n Verify that your user account has sufficient rights to install the Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable Package.
The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager installer initiates the installation of the Visual C++ 2008
Redistributable Package.
n If you want to use a custom certificate for vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager, verify that you have all
the necessary certification authorities in the Trusted Root Certification Authority on the system where you
want to install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
Procedure
1 Double-click the executable file of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server installer.
3 Review and accept the end-user patent agreement and click Next.
5 Select an installation directory for the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and click Next.
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Chapter 2 Installing and Administering vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
Option Description
Automatically generate a certificate Select this option to use an automatically generated certificate for
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
Provide a certificate file later Select this option to manually upload and configure a certificate for
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
CAUTION If you select Provide a certificate file later, you must replace the default
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager certificate after the installation completes, and manually start the
VMware vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager service. If you skip replacing the default
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager certificate, you will be unable to start the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager service. For more information, see “Replace the vCenter Multi-
Hypervisor Manager Certificate and Configuring a New vCenter Server Certificate,” on page 14.
7 Type the connection properties of the vCenter Server system and click Next.
Option Description
IP address or host name Type the IP address or the host name of the vCenter Server system.
Port Type the port number for connecting to the vCenter Server system.
User name Type the user name for an administrative account for the vCenter Server
system. The user account will be granted with administrative privileges on
the root of the third-party hosts inventory tree.
Password Type the password for the administrative account for the vCenter Server
system.
8 If the vCenter Server SSL certificate configuration page appears, verify and accept the SSL certificate of
vCenter Server and click Next.
This vCenter Server SSL certificate configuration page only appears if you have decided to use an
automatically generated certificate.
9 Type the credentials of a user account that has sufficient rights to run the VMware
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager service and has full permissions to issue Windows Remote
Management commands, and click Next.
a In the HTTP server port text box, leave the default port 8088 for the HTTP server from where the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server downloads the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-
in.
The HTTP server is installed together with the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server. Change
the default value of the port if another application uses it.
b In the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Server Port text box, type the port number for the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
c Select how the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server will be identified on the network.
The IP address or the host name that you select must be reachable by the machine that will run the
vSphere Client instance where you will install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in.
d Click Next.
11 Click Install.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
What to do next
Install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager client plug-in for the vSphere Client.
Prerequisites
Verify that the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is installed and running.
Procedure
3 Click Download and Install for the VMware vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in.
The installation wizard for the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager client plug-in opens.
4 Review the end user patent agreement and click Next.
6 Click Install.
The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in is installed in the vSphere Client. The vCenter Multi-
Hypervisor Manager icon appears under Inventory in the vSphere Client.
Procedure
1 Log in to the machine of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server as administrator or as a user that
has rights to run the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager service.
3 In the root installation directory of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server, open a command
prompt and run the mhmd executable with the following arguments:
Argument Description
-C path to extension.xml The path to the extension.xml file in the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
installation directory.
-l vCenter Server IP The IP address or host name of the vCenter Server system. You can also pass a
address, host name, or URL URL to the vCenter Server system.
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Chapter 2 Installing and Administering vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
Argument Description
-n vCenter Server user name The user name with which you want to log in to vCenter Server.
-p vCenter Server password The password to log in to vCenter Server.
-g path to mhm.cfg The path to the mhm.cfg file in the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
installation directory.
-t vCenter Server The mechanism vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager uses to validate the current
certificate thumbprint or vCenter Server certificate.
<verify> If you pass a thumbprint argument, vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager checks
for a thumbprint match only.
If you pass <verify> as the argument, vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager runs
a full validation of the certificate by checking the expiry dates, subject names, and
the certificate issuing authorities.
NOTE If you use a custom certificate for vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
always use the -t <verify> argument for maximum security.
-k path to the private key The path to the private key of the new vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
file certificate. This argument is optional.
-K path to the certificate The path to the new certificate or vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager. This
file argument is optional.
Omit the last two arguments if you have replaced the vCenter Server certificate and you want to pass only
the new vCenter Server certificate without replacing the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager certificate.
If you use the HTTPS protocol, all data exchanged between the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server and
the Hyper-V host passes through an encrypted channel.
If you use the HTTP protocol, the authentication of the Hyper-V host with the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is encrypted, and all the management traffic data exchanged
between the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager and the Hyper-V host runs through a non-encrypted channel.
Management traffic data consists of the operations you perform in the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager,
such as power on a virtual machine, create a virtual machine, add a Hyper-V host to the third-party hosts
inventory, and so on.
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server communicates with Hyper-V hosts by using Microsoft Windows
Remote Management standards and protocols. For more information, see Microsoft Windows Remote
Management documentation.
For information about how to configure Hyper-V hosts for remote management, see Hyper-V documentation.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
By default, no WinRM listeners are defined on a Hyper-V host. To enable HTTP connection between the Hyper-
V host and the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server, you must define a WinRM listener.
Procedure
By default, no WinRM listeners are defined on a Hyper-V host. To enable the communication via HTTPS
between the Hyper-V host and the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server, you must define a WinRM
listener.
Prerequisites
Verify that you have the Web Server (IIS) role enabled with the Internet Information Services Management
Console components.
Procedure
2 Click Start > Administrative Tools > Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager.
3 From the Connections tree, select the node that corresponds to the Hyper-V host and double-click Server
Certificates.
5 In the Create Self-Signed Certificate dialog box, type a name for the certificate and click OK.
6 In the Server Certificates pane, right-click the name of the newly created self-signed certificate, and select
View.
7 On the Details tab, select Thumbprint and copy the certificate thumbprint.
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Chapter 2 Installing and Administering vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
Procedure
The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager log files are saved as a .zip file in the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager installation directory.
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Authorization in
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager 3
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager integrates with the vCenter Server authorization mechanism. You can
associate roles with user accounts for objects from the third-party hosts inventory.
The Ready-Only role has the System.View and System.Read privileges. Any other custom-defined or system
role has these privileges as well. If your user account has the Read-Only or any other role assigned on the root
folder of the vCenter Server system, you can log in to vCenter Server and access the third-party hosts inventory.
If your account has the No Access role or any other role without the System.View and System.Read privileges
assigned on the root folder of the vCenter Server system, you cannot log in to vCenter Server and access the
third-party hosts inventory.
Prerequisites
n The vSphere Client must be connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Permissions.Modify permissions
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 From the third-party hosts inventory tree, select the object to which you want to assign permissions.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
5 To associate a user with the inventory object, click Add in the Users and Groups pane.
a From the Domain drop-down menu, select a domain where the user or group is located.
b Type a name in the Search box or select a name from the list.
d (Optional) Click Check Names to verify that the user or group exists in the database.
e Click OK.
7 From the drop-down menu in the Assign Role pane, select a role.
The privileges of the role are listed in the section below the role title.
The role is applied only to the selected object and does not propagate to the child objects.
9 Click OK.
The server adds the permission to the list of permissions for the object.
The list of permissions references all users and groups that have roles assigned for the object, and indicates
where in the vCenter Server hierarchy the role is assigned.
Add a third-party hypervisor Host.Inventory.Add standalone host The root of the third-party
hosts inventory.
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Chapter 3 Authorization in vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
Create a new virtual machine Virtual machine.Inventory.Create new The third-party host
Create the virtual machine with a disk Datastore.Allocate space The third-party host
Create the virtual machine with a new Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk
The third-party host
disk
Power off a virtual machine Virtual machine.Interaction.Power Off The third-party virtual
machine
Shut down the guest OS of a virtual Virtual machine.Interaction.Power Off The third-party virtual
machine machine
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Edit virtual machine devices. Virtual machine.Configuration.Modify device The third-party virtual
settings machine
Edit virtual machine CPU resources. Virtual machine.Configuration.Change CPU count The third-party virtual
machine
Edit the size of a virtual disk. Virtual machine.Configuration.Extend virtual disk The third-party virtual
machine
Edit a virtual DVD/CD-ROM device Virtual machine.Interaction.Configure CD media The third-party virtual
configuration. machine
Edit a virtual floppy device Virtual machine.Interaction.Configure floppy The third-party virtual
configuration. media machine
Remove a physical disk from the virtual Virtual machine.Configuration.Raw device The third-party virtual
machine. machine
Remove a virtual DVD or CD-ROM, Virtual machine.Configuration.Remove device The third-party virtual
floppy device, or a virtual adapter. machine
Add or remove DVD or CD-ROM, Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove The third-party virtual
floppy device, or a virtual adapter. device machine
Add a physical disk to the virtual Virtual machine.Configuration.Raw device The third-party virtual
machine. machine
Add existing disk. Virtual machine.Configuration.Add existing disk The third-party virtual
machine
Add a virtual disk. Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk The third-party virtual
machine
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Managing Third-Party Hypervisors 4
To simplify the management of virtual environments that have VMware ESX/ESXi hosts and third-party
hypervisors such as Microsoft Hyper-V, you can connect your third-party hypervisors to a vCenter Server
system by using vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager. Having both VMware and third-party hypervisors
connected to vCenter Server, you can manage the whole virtual environment through the vSphere Client.
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager 1.0 supports the management of Microsoft Hyper-V hypervisors in
vCenter Server. From the third-party hosts inventory of the vSphere Client, you can view the Hyper-V hosts
configuration, and perform management tasks such as power off, reboot, disconnect, reconnect, and remove
the host from the third-party hosts inventory.
n Add a Hyper-V Host on page 23
You can add Hyper-V hosts to vCenter Server, and manage both Microsoft Hyper-V and VMware
hypervisors from a single interface.
n View Hyper-V Host Configuration on page 24
You can review the Hyper-V host configuration from the vSphere Client to reconfigure some of the
Hyper-V settings.
n Disconnecting and Reconnecting a Hyper-V Host on page 25
You can disconnect and reconnect a Hyper-V host that vCenter Server manages. vCenter Server stops
performing monitoring activities for a disconnected Hyper-V host.
n Shut Down or Reboot a Hyper-V Host on page 25
You can shut down or reboot the Hyper-V hosts in your third-party hosts' inventory. Shutting down a
Hyper-V host disconnects it from vCenter Server, but does not remove it from the inventory.
n Remove Hyper-V Hosts from Inventory on page 26
You can remove Hyper-V hosts that you no longer need to manage from your third-party hosts inventory.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server is installed and running.
n Verify that the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in is installed in the vSphere Client.
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the Hyper-V host is configured for remote management with the Windows Remote
Management service.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
n To use an HTTPS connection with the host, verify that HTTPS is enabled on the Windows Remote
Management service.
n Verify that you have a user account with administrative privileges on the Hyper-V host.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 Right-click the vCenter Server system and select Add Third-Party Host.
3 On the Connection Settings page, type the connection settings for the Hyper-V host.
If the Windows Remote Management service on the Hyper-V host is configured with a non-default
port, add this port to the host address.
b In the Authorization pane, type the credentials of the administrative account for the host.
4 Click Next.
5 (Optional) If you have configured an HTTP connection with the Hyper-V host, click OK in the confirmation
dialog that warns you about establishing an insecure connection with the host.
The Hyper-V host is added to the vCenter Server system and appears in the inventory.
Prerequisites
Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
You can review the following information about the configuration of the Hyper-V host.
Option Description
Processors Displays information about the model of the processor, the processor speed,
the number of processor sockets, the number of processor cores per socket,
and the number of logical processors. Also displays information about
manufacturer, model, BIOS version, and release date.
Memory Displays information about the physical memory of the Hyper-V host.
Networking Displays information about the virtual switches the Hyper-V host uses.
Network Adapters Displays information about the physical network adapter devices on the
Hyper-V host.
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Chapter 4 Managing Third-Party Hypervisors
The managed Hyper-V host and its associated virtual machines remain in the vCenter Server inventory.
However, removing a managed Hyper-V host from vCenter Server removes the managed host and all its
associated virtual machines from the vCenter Server inventory.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Host.Configuration.Connection
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
The managed Hyper-V host disconnects from vCenter Server, the disconnected designation is appended to its
name in parentheses, and the label is dimmed. Labels of all virtual machines on the host are similarly dimmed
and labeled.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Host.Configuration.Connection
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
When the host reconnects to vCenter Server, the statuses of the virtual machines on that host are updated to
reflect the change.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Host.Configuration.Maintenance
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
3 Shut down all virtual machines that are not configured to shut down automatically when the Hyper-V
host shuts down or restarts.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Host.Inventory.Remove host.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click the Hyper-V host and select Remove.
3 In the confirmation dialog box, click Yes to remove the Hyper-V host.
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager removes the Hyper-V host and all associated virtual machines from
the vCenter Server inventory.
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Creating Virtual Machines on Hyper-V
Hosts 5
Virtual machines are a key component in a virtual environment. You can create virtual machines on Hyper-V
hosts that are connected to vCenter Server.
When you create a new virtual machine on a Hyper-V host in vCenter Server, you associate it with the third-
party hosts inventory. After you power on the virtual machine, it consumes resources dynamically as the
workload increases, and returns them as the workload decreases.
Every Hyper-V virtual machine has virtual devices that provide the same function as physical hardware. A
virtual machine gets CPU, memory, storage, and network connectivity from its Hyper-V host.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
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n Verify that you have privileges to create third-party virtual machines, listed in “Privileges for Creating
and Removing Third-Party Virtual Machines,” on page 21.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 Right-click a Hyper-V host and select New Virtual Machine.
What to do next
Procedure
1 On the Name and Location page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, type a name for the virtual
machine in the Name text box.
Option Description
Use default location Leave this option selected to use the default location for storing virtual
machine files on the Hyper-V host.
Specify location Type a new location for storing the files of the new virtual machine. For
example, C:\Virtual Machines\My Virtual Machine
3 Click Next.
What to do next
Typically, the minimum amount of memory that a virtual machine needs is at least 512MB depending on the
guest operating system that you install. The maximum amount of memory that you should allocate to a virtual
machine is equal to or less than the physical memory of its host.
Procedure
1 On the Memory page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, select the amount of memory to allocate
for the virtual machine.
2 Click Next.
What to do next
28 VMware, Inc.
Chapter 5 Creating Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
Configure Networking
You can configure a networking connection to the virtual machine so it can communicate with other network
nodes, such as Hyper-V hosts, devices, and virtual machines.
Procedure
1 On the Network Type page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, select a network adapter from the
Type drop-down list.
Option Description
No Adapter Leaves the virtual machine without networking.
Legacy Network Adapter Allows network boot, but might lead to slower performance.
Network Adapter Provides better performance, but might require installing additional guest
OS drivers. This adapter type does not support network boot.
The additional drivers are provided by the integration services for the guest
OS. Newer versions of the supported Windows guest operating systems
include the integration services by default. For all other supported guest
operating systems, you must install the integration services separately.
2 In the Network Connection pane, select a virtual network from the Network Label drop-down list.
3 Click Next.
What to do next
Procedure
1 On the Select a Disk page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, select an option for attaching a disk
to the virtual machine.
Option Description
Create a new virtual disk Create a new disk and attach it to the virtual machine.
Use an existing virtual disk Reuse an existing disk that is configured with an operating system or other
virtual machine data.
Create a disk later Attach a virtual disk later.
2 Click Next.
What to do next
If you decide to create a new disk, configure its properties. If you decide to use an existing disk, select its
location. To create the virtual machine without disk, review the virtual machine details and create it.
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Procedure
1 On the Create a New Disk page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, type a name for the new virtual
disk.
Option Description
Allocate and commit space on The disk uses only as much storage space as it needs. If the disk needs more
demand (Dynamic) space, it can grow to the maximum capacity allocated to it.
Allocate all disk space now (Fixed) The storage space allocated to the disk is reserved for this disk only.
4 On the Location pane, select an option for the virtual disk location.
Option Description
Use default storage Use the default virtual disks location on the Hyper-V host.
Specify a datastore Type a custom location for virtual disk on the Hyper-V host. For example,
C:\MyVirtualMachines\VirtualMachineDisks\
5 Click Next.
What to do next
Select an option for installing a guest operating system on the virtual machine.
Procedure
1 On the Select Existing Disk page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, type a location for the already
existing virtual disk on the Hyper-V host.
2 Click Next.
What to do next
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Chapter 5 Creating Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
Procedure
1 On the Operating System Installation page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, select an option
for installing a guest operating system on the virtual machine.
Option Description
Install an operating system later Install an operating system after you create the new virtual machine.
Install an operating system from a Use a bootable media to install the guest operating system.
bootable CD/DVD-ROM or a floppy
disk
Install an operating system from a Use a network-based installation of the guest operating system. To use this
network-based installation server option, you must have configured the virtual machine with a legacy network
adapter.
2 Click Next.
What to do next
Depending on the selected option for installing the guest operating system, there are two ways to proceed:
n Select an installation media.
n Complete the virtual machine creation.
Procedure
1 On the Installation Media page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, select the media.
Option Description
Physical CD/DVD drive Map a physical CD or a DVD drive to the virtual machine where you have
the installation media loaded.
Image file (.iso) Type the location of an ISO image on the file system of the Hyper-V host.
Floppy image (.vfd) Type the location of the floppy image file on the file system of the Hyper-V
host.
2 Click Next.
What to do next
Review the details for the virtual machine and create it.
Procedure
1 On the Ready to Complete page of the Create New Virtual Machine wizard, review the configuration
settings for the virtual machine.
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2 (Optional) To change the virtual machine settings, go back through the pages of the wizard and change
the settings as necessary.
What to do next
Before you can use the new virtual machine, install a guest operating system, and install integration services
if needed.
32 VMware, Inc.
Managing Virtual Machines on Hyper-
V Hosts 6
You can manage all virtual machines on Hyper-V hosts from the third-party hosts inventory by using the
vSphere Client. To manage Hyper-V hosts through your vCenter Server system, you must have
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server installed on your system and the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in installed in the vSphere Client.
You can power on, power off, and suspend the virtual machines of a Hyper-V host. Power state operations
can be useful when you want to perform maintenance on your Hyper-V host. To enhance virtual machine
performance, you can also add virtual devices to the virtual machine or change them.
n Virtual Machine Power State Operations on page 33
The ability to change virtual machine power states is useful when you perform maintenance on the
Hyper-V host or want to change the virtual machine hardware devices.
n Changing Virtual Machine Configuration on page 34
You can reconfigure virtual machine properties after you create the virtual machine and install a guest
operating system. You can change nearly every characteristic that you configured when you created the
virtual machine.
n Remove a Virtual Machine on page 41
You can remove virtual machines that you no longer need to see in the third-party hosts inventory.
You can power on, power off, suspend, and reset virtual machines on Hyper-V hosts.
Power Off Powers off the virtual machine. You can update the virtual hardware settings
on a powered-off virtual machine.
Suspend Pauses all the virtual machine activity. You can power on the virtual machine
later to run all paused activities.
Reset Shuts down and restarts the virtual machine. This power state operation is
similar to resetting a physical machine by pressing its reset button. Any
programs running in the virtual machine might be disrupted.
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Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privilege: Virtual machine.Interaction.Power On
n Before you power on a virtual machine, verify that the Hyper-V host has sufficient resources. The sum of
all virtual machines memory must not exceed the Hyper-V memory. You must have enough memory for
the virtual machine, and some memory overhead.
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 On the Hyper-V host, right-click a virtual machine and select Power On.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Interaction.Power Off
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 In the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a virtual machine and select Power Off.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required priviliges: Virtual machine.Interaction.Suspend
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
2 In the vSphere Client inventory, right-click a virtual machine and select Suspend.
When you create a virtual machine, the hardware properties you set correspond to the physical resources
available on the Hyper-V host where the virtual machine resides. The virtual machine hardware includes
memory configuration, CPU configuration, hard disk size, available network adapters, and so on.
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Chapter 6 Managing Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
Memory The size of the virtual hardware memory determines how much memory is available to applications
that are running inside the virtual machine. A virtual machine cannot benefit from more memory
resources than its configured virtual hardware memory size.
CPU You can configure a virtual machine that runs on a Hyper-V host to have one or more virtual
processors. A virtual machine cannot have more virtual CPUs than the actual number of logical
CPUs on the host. You can change the number of CPUs allocated to a virtual machine and configure
the CPU resource allocation.
Floppy Drive You can connect to a floppy (.flp) image only. You can add, remove, or configure a floppy device.
Hard Disk Stores the virtual machine's operating system, program files, and other data associated with its
activities. A virtual disk is a large physical file, or a set of files, that can be copied, moved, archived,
and backed up.
You can add physical hard drives for a pass-through to a virtual machine. The hard disk on the
Hyper-V host must be enabled for pass-through.
Network Adapter Network adapters provide network connectivity between the virtual machines on the same host,
between virtual machines on different hosts, and between other virtual and physical machines.
When you configure a virtual machine, you can add network adapters (NICs) and set the adapter
type.
CD/DVD Drive You can configure DVD/CD-ROM devices to connect to host devices or ISO files on a datastore.
You can view and configure the virtual machine hardware and add or remove devices from a virtual machine.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Memory
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
To change the amount of memory allocated to the virtual machine, use the slider or type a value in the
Memory Size text box.
To select the predefined default or recommended setting, click the colored triangles on the right-hand side
of the memory bar.
If you intend to change the number of virtual processors of a virtual machine, you must power off the virtual
machine.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Change CPU count and Virtual
machine.Configuration.Change resource
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
4 In the Resource Allocation pane, allocate the CPU allocation for the virtual machine.
Option Description
Weight Defines how the Hyper-V host allocates resources to this virtual machine
when running virtual machines compete for resources.
Reservation Defines the percentage of CPU capacity that is reserved for the virtual
machine. This setting guarantees CPU allocation for the virtual machine.
Limit Defines the upper limit that can be used by the virtual machine from the CPU
capacity available to the virtual machine.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Interaction.Configure floppy media
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 In the Device Type pane, select Use existing floppy image in datastore and provide the path to the floppy
image in the text box.
4 Select the option to create a new floppy image if one does not exist.
5 Click OK.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
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Chapter 6 Managing Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
The Virtual Machine Properties dialog box appears.
2 On the Hardware tab, select a hard disk from the virtual machine hardware devices.
3 From the Virtual Device Node drop-down menu, select the virtual device node where you want the hard
disk to appear.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required privileges: Network.Assign network
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
2 On the Hardware tab, select Network Adapter from the virtual machine hardware devices.
Option Description
Automatic A MAC address is assigned automatically.
Manual Type the MAC address for the virtual machine.
4 In the Network Connection pane, select an option from the Network label drop-down menu.
Option Description
Disconnected Disconnect the network adapter.
Local Area Connection - Virtual Select the port group for the virtual NIC to connect to.
Network
5 Click OK.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required priviliges: Virtual machine.Interaction.Configure CD media
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Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
Option Description
Host Device From the Host Device drop-down menu, select a device.
Datastore ISO File In the Datastore ISO File text box, type the filepath to a .iso file that you
want the virtual machine to use for a CD-ROM or DVD Drive.
4 From the Virtual Device Node drop-down menu, select the node the drive to use in the virtual machine.
5 Click OK.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges:Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 On the Device Type page, select CD/DVD Drive and click Next.
4 From the CD/DVD Media Type page, select an option and click Next.
Option Action
Use a physical drive In the Select CSD/DVD Drive page, select the drive you want to use from the
drop-down menu, and click Next.
Use ISO image In the Select ISO Image page, enter the path and filename for the image file,
and click Next.
5 On the Advanced Options page, select the virtual device node for the drive and click Next.
7 In the Virtual Machine Properties dialog box, click OK to apply the changes.
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Chapter 6 Managing Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device and Network.Assign
network
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 On the Device Type page, select Network Adapter and click Next.
4 In the Adapter Type pane, select a network adapter type from the Type drop-down menu.
Option Description
Network Adapter Provides better performance, but requires additional guest OS drivers. This
adapter does not support network boot.
The additional drivers are available in the integration services for the guest
OS. Newer versions of the supported Windows guest operating systems
include the integration services by default. For all other supported guest
operating systems, you must install the integration services separately.
Legacy Network Adapter Allows network boot, but might lead to slower performance. The legacy
network adapter is not supported on the 64-bit edition of Windows Server
2003.
5 In the Network Connection pane, select a virtual network from the Network Label drop-down list.
6 Click Next.
7 Review the Ready to Complete page and click Finish.
8 In the Virtual Machine Properties dialog box, click OK to apply the changes.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk and Datastore.Allocate space
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
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3 On the Device Type page, select Hard Disk and click Next.
4 On the Select a Disk page, select Create a new virtual disk from the options for attaching a disk to the
virtual machine.
5 On the Create a Disk page, type a name for the new virtual disk in the Name pane.
6 In the Capacity pane, type a size for the disk and from the Disk Size drop-down menu, select a disk size
in Megabytes, Gigabytes, or Terabytes.
7 In the Disk Provisioning pane, select the disk provisioning type.
Option Description
Allocate and commit space on The disk uses only as much storage space as it needs. If the disk needs more
demand (Dynamic) space, it can grow to the maximum capacity allocated to it.
Allocate all disk space now (Fixed) The storage space allocated to the disk is reserved for this disk only.
8 On the Location pane, select an option for the virtual disk location.
Option Description
Use default storage Use the default virtual disks location on the Hyper-V host.
Specify a datastore Type a custom location for virtual disk on the Hyper-V host. For example,
C:\MyVirtualMachines\VirtualMachineDisks\
9 Click Next.
10 On the Advanced Options page, select the virtual device node from the Virtual Device Node drop-down
menu.
12 In the Virtual Machine Properties dialog box, click OK to apply the changes.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Add existing disk and Datastore.Allocate space
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 On the Device Type page, select Hard Disk and click Next.
4 On the Select a Disk page, select Use an existing virtual disk from the options for attaching a disk to the
virtual machine.
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Chapter 6 Managing Virtual Machines on Hyper-V Hosts
5 On the Select Existing Disk page, type a location for the already existing virtual disk on the Hyper-V host.
6 On the Advanced Options page, select the virtual device node from the Virtual Device Node drop-down
menu.
8 In the Virtual Machine Properties dialog box, click OK to apply the changes.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine.Configuration.Raw device
Procedure
1 From the third-party hosts inventory, right-click a powered off virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 On the Device Type page, select Hard Disk and click Next.
6 Select a SCSI or an IDE virtual device node for the hard drive and click Next.
7 Review the properties for adding the physical disk and click Finish.
8 In the Virtual Machine Properties dialog box, click OK to save your changes.
Removing a virtual machine from the third-party hosts inventory unregisters it from the Hyper-V host and
vCenter Server. Virtual machine files remain at the same storage location on the Hyper-V host.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the vSphere Client is connected to the vCenter Server system.
n Verify that the virtual machine is powered off.
n Required privileges: Virtual machine..Inventory..Remove
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, select Home > Inventory > vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
vCenter Server removes references to the virtual machine and no longer tracks its condition.
42 VMware, Inc.
Troubleshooting
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager 7
The troubleshooting vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager topics provide solutions to problems that you might
encounter when installing or using vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager.
n Unable to Install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Server on page 43
The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server installation might fail with an error message.
n Unable to Log In to vCenter Server on page 44
You might be unable to log in to vCenter Server and access the third-party hosts' inventory tree.
n Unable to Reach vCenter Server During vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager Server Installation on
page 44
vCenter Server is not reachable during the installation of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server
and an error message displays.
Problem
Attempts to install the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server might fail. The following error message
appears:
Error 1721. There is a problem with this Windows Installer Package. A program required for this
install to complete could not be run. Contact your support personnel or package vendor. Action:
InstallVCRedistributable, location: .../vcredist_x64.e..."
Cause
The installer of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server attempts to install the Microsoft Visual C++ 2008
Redistributable Package (vcredist_x64). The Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable Package required by
the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager cannot be installed, because you do not have sufficient rights on the
Windows machine where you are installing the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
Solution
You must log in as an administrator to the Windows machine where you want to install the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server, or you must log in as a user with sufficient rights to install the
Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable Package.
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Problem
You cannot log in to vCenter Server and access the third-party hosts' inventory tree. The following error
message appears:
The vSphere Client could not connect to vCenter Server address. You do not have permission to login
to the server: vCenter Server address
Cause
Your user account has the No-Access role assigned on the root folder of vCenter Server or has no role assigned
at all.
Solution
Assign at least the Read-Only role to your user account on the root folder of the vCenter Server system.
Problem
On the Certificate Type Selection page of the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager installer, you select the
Provide a certificate later option and click Next. On the vCenter Server page, you provide the connection
settings for vCenter Server and click Next. The following error message displays and the installation is blocked:
Cause
n The vCenter Server certificate has expired.
n The vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager installer checks whether the certificate of the root certification
authority that issued the vCenter Server certificate exists in the Trusted Root Certification Authorities on
the system where you are installing the vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server. If the certificate of the
root certification authority is not found in the Trusted Root Certification Authorities, you cannot continue
with the installation and the error message is displayed.
Solution
n Replace the vCenter Server certificate with a valid one.
n Add the root certificate of the certification authority that issued the vCenter Server certificate to the Trusted
Root Certification Authorities on the system where you are installing the
vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server.
CAUTION Importing certification authorities manually in the Trusted Root Certification Authorities might
compromise the security of your system. Make sure that the root certificate of the certification authority
that you want to import is authentic and is received through a secure channel.
44 VMware, Inc.
Index
A Hyper-V host
add host configuration 24
Hyper-V host 23 reboot 25
third-party host 23 remove 26
assign permissions 19 remove from inventory 26
authorization 19 shutdown 25
C I
cannot log in 44 installing
certificate 14 vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager plug-in 14
choose vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server 12,
HTTP 15 44
HTTPS 15 vSphere Client plug-in 14
choosing
HTTP 15 L
HTTPS 15 logs
create virtual machine collect 17
complete creation 31 generate bundle 17
configure memory 28
configure networking 29 M
manage
configure virtual disk 29
Hyper-V host 23
create new disk 30
third-party host 23
networking 29
third-party hypervisors 23
OS installation 31 managing
OS installation media 31 Hyper-V host 23
select existing disk 30 third-party host 23
start virtual machine creation 27 third-party hypervisors 23
virtual machine location 28 multi-hypervisor environments 7
virtual machine name 28
N
D no access 44
disconnect
Hyper-V host 25 O
third-party host 25 operating system installation 31
E P
enable
permissions 19
HTTP 16
ports
HTTPS 16
communication ports 11
Windows Remote Management listener 16
default ports 11
HTTP ports 11
H
host HTTPS ports 11
disconnect 25 power off, third-party virtual machine 34
power on, third-party virtual machine 34
reconnect 25
HTTP, enabling 16 power state 33
HTTPS, enabling 16
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Managing Multi-Hypervisor Environments with vCenter Server
privileges remove 41
add device 22 remove from inventory 41
add host 20 troubleshooting vCenter Multi-Hypervisor
create virtual machine 20 Manager 43
disconnect host 20
edit CPU resources 22 V
edit memory resources 22 vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
communication ports 10
host operations 20
configuring 9
power off virtual machine 21
deployment 10
power on virtual machine 21
installing 9
reboot host 20
installing vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
reconfigure virtual machine 20–22
plug-in 9
remove host 20
installing vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager
reset virtual machine 21 server 9
virtual machine operations 20 vCenter Multi-Hypervisor Manager server 43
vCenter Server, not reachable 44
R virtual machine
reconnect add hard disk 41
Hyper-V host 25
add hard drive 41
third-party host 25
add pass-through hard disk 41
reconnect Hyper-V host 25
add physical hard disk 41
replace certificate 14
power state operations 33
replace default certificate 14
required privileges 19, 20
roles 19
S
server, installing 12
suspend, third-party virtual machine 34
system requirements 10
T
third-party virtual machine
add CD 38
add CD-ROM 38
add device 38
add DVD 38
add DVD drive 38
add existing virtual disk 40
add network adapter 39
add new virtual disk 39
add virtual disk 39, 40
configuration 34
edit CD 37
edit CD-ROM 37
edit CPU 35
edit DVD 37
edit DVD drive 37
edit floppy drive 36
edit hard disk 36
edit memory 35
edit network adapter 37
46 VMware, Inc.