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

Service blueprint


A catalog in vRealize Automation is referred to as a service blueprint in ASD terminology. While a blueprint is a complete specification of a service, with service blueprints, you can publish predefined and custom vRealize Orchestrator workflows as catalog items to either request or provision. Depending on whether or not you would like to perform any actions after provisioning, the steps involved in creating a service blueprint will vary:

  • Perform actions on the service blueprint after it is provisioned:

    Required steps are:

    1. Create a custom resource mapping.

    2. Create a service blueprint.

    3. Create resource actions that define the post provisioning operations.

  • No actions are required after provisioning a service blueprint:

    Required step is:

    1. Create a service blueprint.

Prerequisites

Configure the vCenter Server in vRO using the Orchestrator client:

Ensure the Orchestrator server configuration is set up for the tenant (publishing).

Service blueprint provisioning and post-provisioning operation...