Book Image

Learning VMware vSphere

By : Rebecca Fitzhugh, Abhilash G B
Book Image

Learning VMware vSphere

By: Rebecca Fitzhugh, Abhilash G B

Overview of this book

Computer virtualization is a method to enable the running of multiple application workloads on a machine to achieve efficient utilization and reduce the number of physical machines in a data center. This has now become the foundation of many modern day data centers. What began as a technology to virtualize x86 architecture has now grown beyond the limits of a server’s hardware and into the realm of storage and network virtualization. VMware is currently the market leader in developing data center virtualization solutions. This book goes into the details of designing and implementing VMware solutions that form the foundation of a VMware infrastructure. The book begins by introducing you to the concepts of server virtualization followed by the architecture of VMware’s hypervisor – ESXi and then by its installation and configuration. You then learn what is required to manage a vSphere environment and configure advanced management capabilities of vCenter. Next you are taken through topics on vSphere Networking, Storage, ESXi Clustering, Resource Management and Virtual Machine Management. You will then be introduced to SSL Certificate Management and its use in a vSphere environment. Finally, you will learn about the lifecycle management of a vSphere environment by effectively monitoring, patching and upgrading vSphere components using Update Manager. By the end of the book, you will know how to use VMware’s vSphere suite of components to lay the foundation of a modern day virtual infrastructure.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning VMware vSphere
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Configuring the identity sources on the SSO server


An identity source, as the name indicates, is a repository with information regarding the authentication domains that SSO should validate user credentials against and issue tokens using the Secure Token Service (STS)

.

SSO supports the following identity source types:

  • Active Directory (Integrated Windows Authentication): This can be used when your Active Directory is in Native mode. With this identity source type selected you could either use the current local machine account as the Service Principal Name (SPN) or choose to specify a different SPN.

  • Active Directory as an LDAP Server: This is primarily used for backward compatibility.

  • Open LDAP: This is used when you have an Open LDAP only based the directory service in your environment

  • Local OS: This would become the source for the local operating system users on the machine where SSO is installed and not the vCenter Server.

Here is how you would add an identity source to the SSO server:

  1. Use...