VMware vSphere vCenter Server Installation Lab
IP Addressing
You will be assigning static IPs to your systems in this lab. Please use these settings:
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Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
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Default Gateway: 192.168.1.1
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DNS Server 192.168.1.1
System | IP |
---|---|
HV-A |
192.168.1.20 |
HV-B |
192.168.1.21 |
VCSA |
192.168.1.22 |
Instructions
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VMs are located on the https://netlab.ihitc.net Netlab system, be sure you are signed in to the ITC Passport site through D2L before attempting to access this system
You will need to make a reservation for the ESXi Labs in this class before you are able to access the VMs. Changes will be saved between your reservations so you will be able to make multiple reservations over several days as needed to complete labs. If you need to split your work up across multiple reservations be sure to safely shutdown your ESXi VMs before ending your Netlab reservation. Otherwise when your reservation ends Netlab will simply power off your VMs (without shutting them down first) which could cause data corruption. If you make a mistake and need to have one or both of your HV VMs erased so you can re-install ESXi you will need to contact your instructor or the ITC lab assistant to have them reset. -
Boot your ESXi Server systems (the two HV systems)
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Obtain static IP addressing information from the table above and change the IP address of each ESXi server in your pod to a unique static IP address.
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Use the PC-C VM to mount the VCSA installation ISO file by double clicking on it.
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The VCSA ISO file is named "VMware-VCSA-all-8.0.1-22088981.iso" and can be found on the internal website http://172.17.139.70:8080 which you can access from PC-C.
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Open the installer.exe file found in the vcsa-ui-installer\win32 directory of the VCSA ISO image and click install to begin the installation process. If you’re unfamiliar with the installation process you can refer back to your readings.
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During the installation you will need to select ONE of your pod’s ESXi servers to install the vCenter appliance onto. Only one VCSA installation per pod!
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Set a root password for your VCSA server during the installation process, be sure to write this down!
It is strongly suggested you use "VCSAroot#itc2300" as the administrative password so that you can reference it here and your instructor can assist with issues in your lab. -
When asked about the appliance size choose a "Tiny" installation and "Default" storage size.
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Select the checkbox to enable "Thin-Disk Mode"
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Set the correct static IP address for the VCSA from the allocation you received for your pod above.
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The first phase of the installation will take quite a while to complete. Once it is done you will be prompted to start stage 2
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Choose to synchronize time with the ESXi host and enable ssh access
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When creating a new SSO domain use "podX.local" (where X is replaced by your pod ID letter) as your SSO Domain Name. Set the single-sign on password to VCSAsso#itc2300
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After the installation completes use your credentials (administrator@podX.local) to log in to the VCSA web client at the address provided.
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Spend a few minutes exploring the VCSA web client interface
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Create a new Datacenter and give it a name
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Add the all the ESXi hosts in your pod to the datacenter
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Create a few more VMs through VCSA on both ESXi hosts.
You will need to upload the ISOs to the datastore on the ESXi system which you are creating the VM on before you can install the systems. This uploading can be done through VCSA from PC-C. Various OS installation ISO files can be found on internal website http://172.17.139.70:8080 which you can access from PC-C. -
Safely shutdown all running VMs except VCSA
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Safely shutdown the VCSA appliance
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Safely shutdown all ESXi hosts
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End your Netlab Reservation
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