Book Image

VMware vCloud Director Cookbook

By : Daniel Langenhan
Book Image

VMware vCloud Director Cookbook

By: Daniel Langenhan

Overview of this book

VMware vCloud Director is an enterprise software solution that enables the building of secure, private clouds by pooling together infrastructure resources into virtual data centers. The tool enables self-service via a web interface to reduce the management overhead and offers amazing possibilities for production and development environments. Thus, the tool will ensure efficient management of resources with data center efficiency and business agility. "VMWare VCloud Director Cookbook" will cover a lot of ground, ranging from easy to complex recipes. It will not only dive into networks, data-stores, and vApps, but also cover vCloud design improvements, troubleshooting, and the vCloud API. "VMWare VCloud Director Cookbook" is split into different sections, each of which deals with a special topic in vCloud - from networks, to vApps, to storage and design. This book contains over 80 recipes with the difficulty levels ranging from simple to very advanced. You will learn how to automate vCloud easily and quickly with the API, and also learn how to isolate a vApp and still fully access it without risking the network. Design considerations that need to be addressed while deploying the vCloud and more will also be looked into. "VMWare VCloud Director Cookbook" will make your life as an admin a lot easier by providing you with some good recipes that have been proven to work in small to large enterprises.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
VMware vCloud Director Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Appendix
Index

The problems associated with the backup and restore of vCloud


You have probably been thinking of how to back up and restore your vCloud content; here are some thoughts on this.

How it works...

Surprisingly, it actually doesn't work well at all (at the time of writing this book). Most backup vendors can currently back up VMs from the vCloud quite well; however, they don't have a clear concept about restores yet.

For backups there are basically two methods. The first is to use a backup agent inside the VMs that transfers the data to be backed up via the network. Software examples would be Symantec NetBackup and IBM Tivoli. The second method is to integrate the backup with the storage backend. A software example would be CommVault. What happens here is that the backup is done by backing up the VM directories directly on the datastores.

Let's consider the downside of the storage-integrated backups first. Most backup vendors have no problem when dealing with thin-provisioned VMs, but you may want...