Book Image

Learning VMware vRealize Automation

By : SRIRAM RAJENDRAN, Sriram Rajendran
Book Image

Learning VMware vRealize Automation

By: SRIRAM RAJENDRAN, Sriram Rajendran

Overview of this book

With the growing interest in Software Defined Data Centers (SDDC), vRealize Automation offers data center users an organized service catalog and governance for administrators. This way, end users gain autonomy while the IT department stays in control, making sure security and compliance requirements are met. Learning what each component does and how they dovetail with each other will bolster your understanding of vRealize Automation. The book starts off with an introduction to the distributed architecture that has been tested and installed in large scale deployments. Implementing and configuring distributed architecture with custom certificates is unarguably a demanding task, and it will be covered next. After this, we will progress with the installation. A vRealize Automation blueprint can be prepared in multiple ways; we will focus solely on vSphere endpoint blueprint. After this, we will discuss the high availability configuration via NSX loadbalancer for vRealize Orchestrator. Finally, we end with Advanced Service Designer, which provides service architects with the ability to create advanced services and publish them as catalog items.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Learning VMware vRealize Automation
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

What is vRealize Automation?


vRealize Automation (a.k.a vRA) is a complete Cloud Management Platform (CMP) that can be used to build and manage a multi-vendor cloud infrastructure. Using an automation solution, end users can self-provision virtual machines in private and public cloud environments, physical machines (install OEM images), applications, and IT services according to policies defined by administrators.

Using a sales pitch definition—it is a self-serviced, policy-driven orchestration and cloud automation engine with integration capabilities built into the core of the product.

Before you move forward, I would like you to take a closer look at the preceding image that depicts how various products in VMware dovetail to complement the automation solution. The automation construct is built upon a layer of management that can automate tasks and activities in compute, storage, and network components that is referred to as Software-Defined Data Center (SDDC).

Key capabilities

I have listed a few key capabilities about vRealize Automation. While there could be many more, the following list should cover it all:

  • A single solution of abstracted service models

  • Model once, deploy anywhere

  • Personalization through policies

A single solution of abstracted service models

vRealize Automation provides the ability to create models of services. These services are abstracted from each other within a single solution. For example, application services (PaaS) are abstracted from infrastructure services (IaaS), which are further abstracted from resource pools. I like to think about these as layers of services, layered on top of each other like the layers of an onion. If you think about it, VMware has always been in the business of providing abstraction.

Model once – deploy anywhere

The power of the abstracted service model is that you can treat a model the same irrespective of where the service gets deployed. You can model a service once, and deploy it anywhere; be it production or development or a cloud (private or public) setup.

Personalization through policies (governance)

Governance is considered a high priority item in the world of automation. Even though we want to create models of abstracted services that can be treated the same irrespective of where they get deployed, we do not want to provide each consumer with the same service. Each consumer demands a personalized service for specific business needs. vRealize Automation provides this ability through policies. Fine-grained policies work in conjunction with personalization of a service. For example, if a developer requests a service, they will receive a development environment with a small footprint, without the need for approvals, perhaps deployed into the public cloud. If a business analyst requests the same service, their personalized service may get deployed into the private cloud by placing approvals in place.

These key capabilities of vRealize Automation are unique. They are critical for providing agility by automating the delivery of personalized services.