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To work with the cloud platform, you will use virtual datacenters (VDCs) to access your cloud resources and provision new virtual environments. In a virtual datacenter you can work with virtual resources, including network infrastructure, external storage systems, backups, security, and so on. A virtual datacenter also has the advantages of cloud computing:
Virtualization
Pay-as-you-go billing
Quick scalability
Technology and hardware abstraction.
A virtual datacenter offers datacenter infrastructure as a service, so you can run your applications more cheaply and with greater flexibility. In your VDC, you will find compute resources and other resources, such as volumes and public IPs, that you an attach to your VMs. Each VDC has similar features and functionality and each VDC belongs to a private cloud datacenter or public cloud region. In private cloud, a VDC uses a hypervisor of one type only and in public cloud, a VDC can be created by the provider, e.g. in AWS a VDC corresponds to a VPC, or by the platform.
Screenshot: In the Virtual datacenters view, with the V. Datacenters list and the Virtual appliances tab that contains virtual appliance cards, open a virtual appliance
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Virtual appliances
Within your virtual datacenter, virtual appliances (VApps) are folders that contain groups of VMs. When you open a VDC, you will probably see one or more virtual appliances. And you can create more virtual appliances of your own to organize groups of related VMs.
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Deploy to launch your VMs
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To start the virtual appliance, click the Deploy virtual appliance button in the top right-hand corner of the Virtual machines panel. This will deploy and start the VMs in the virtual appliance. You can also deploy virtual appliances using the controls that appear when a virtual appliance is selected in the virtual datacenter view. When the Virtual appliance is deployed, the Deploy button becomes an Undeploy button or a Deploy all VMs button. To destroy all the VMs and all your data on the hard disks, click the Undeploy button. |
Screenshot: Deployed VMs in a virtual appliance
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Monitor a VM
Your environment may have VM monitoring configured by default, in which case you can open the virtual appliance's Monitoring tab to view metrics. And you can select the metrics to display and create alarms for VM metrics when you edit the VM.
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To monitor a VM
You can retrieve and display metrics to monitor the performance of your VM. |
Copy VM disks to create an instance template
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In private cloud, to use an instance template to create a VM, select the master template that was used to create the VM. The platform will display a list of the instances for you to select from. In public cloud, you can select the instance directly because it is at the same level as the master templates.
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Screenshot: Reconfigure a VM, General Information
Connecting your VMs: If you don’t configure a network interface card (NIC) before you deploy your VM, the platform will configure a default one. You can add NICs to your VMs to add IPs in a private network for communication within the VDC, or another type of network with access outside the VDC, as configured by your administrator.
Add hard disks to save your data: Hard disks on the hypervisor datastore are not persistent and when the user undeploys the virtual appliance, the hard disks are destroyed. To create a hard disk, edit the VM and go to the Storage tab.
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Connect to your VMs
You can connect to VMs on most hypervisors and providers using VNC (or RDP) by clicking the console button on the VM control panel. To connect in public cloud, before you deploy your VM, you will need to store your SSH public key in your user account. And in some platforms you will need to enter your telephone number in your user account for connecting to the VM using SSH or RDP. See Edit your user account details
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Make changes to a running virtual appliance
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To work with the cloud platform, you will use virtual datacenters (VDCs) to access your cloud resources and provision new virtual environments. In a virtual datacenter you can work with virtual resources, including network infrastructure, external storage systems, backups, security, and so on. A virtual datacenter also has the advantages of cloud computing:
Virtualization
Pay-as-you-go billing
Quick scalability
Technology and hardware abstraction.
A virtual datacenter offers datacenter infrastructure as a service, so you can run your applications more cheaply and with greater flexibility. In your VDC, you will find compute resources and other resources, such as volumes and public IPs, that you an attach to your VMs. Each VDC has similar features and functionality and each VDC belongs to a private cloud datacenter or public cloud region. In private cloud, a VDC uses a hypervisor of one type only and in public cloud, a VDC can be created by the provider, e.g. in AWS a VDC corresponds to a VPC, or by the platform.
Screenshot: In the Virtual datacenters view, with the V. Datacenters list and the Virtual appliances tab that contains virtual appliance cards, open a virtual appliance
...
Virtual appliances
Within your virtual datacenter, virtual appliances (VApps) are folders that contain groups of VMs. When you open a VDC, you will probably see one or more virtual appliances. And you can create more virtual appliances of your own to organize groups of related VMs.
...
Expand | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
|
Deploy to launch your VMs
...
Expand | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
To start the virtual appliance, click the Deploy virtual appliance button in the top right-hand corner of the Virtual machines panel. This will deploy and start the VMs in the virtual appliance. You can also deploy virtual appliances using the controls that appear when a virtual appliance is selected in the virtual datacenter view. When the Virtual appliance is deployed, the Deploy button becomes an Undeploy button or a Deploy all VMs button. To destroy all the VMs and all your data on the hard disks, click the Undeploy button. |
Screenshot: Deployed VMs in a virtual appliance
...
Monitor a VM
Your environment may have VM monitoring configured by default, in which case you can open the virtual appliance's Monitoring tab to view metrics. And you can select the metrics to display and create alarms for VM metrics when you edit the VM.
Expand | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
To monitor a VM
You can retrieve and display metrics to monitor the performance of your VM. |
Copy VM disks to create an instance template
...
Expand | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
|
In private cloud, to use an instance template to create a VM, select the master template that was used to create the VM. The platform will display a list of the instances for you to select from. In public cloud, you can select the instance directly because it is at the same level as the master templates.
...
Screenshot: Reconfigure a VM, General Information
Connecting your VMs: If you don’t configure a network interface card (NIC) before you deploy your VM, the platform will configure a default one. You can add NICs to your VMs to add IPs in a private network for communication within the VDC, or another type of network with access outside the VDC, as configured by your administrator.
Add hard disks to save your data: Hard disks on the hypervisor datastore are not persistent and when the user undeploys the virtual appliance, the hard disks are destroyed. To create a hard disk, edit the VM and go to the Storage tab.
Expand | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
|
Connect to your VMs
You can connect to VMs on most hypervisors and providers using VNC (or RDP) by clicking the console button on the VM control panel. To connect in public cloud, before you deploy your VM, you will need to store your SSH public key in your user account. And in some platforms you will need to enter your telephone number in your user account for connecting to the VM using SSH or RDP. See Edit your user account details
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Expand | ||
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Make changes to a running virtual appliance
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