Book Image

Learning PowerCLI - Second Edition

By : Robert van den Nieuwendijk
Book Image

Learning PowerCLI - Second Edition

By: Robert van den Nieuwendijk

Overview of this book

VMware vSphere PowerCLI, a free extension to Microsoft Windows PowerShell, enables you to automate the management of a VMware vSphere or vCloud environment. This book will show you how to automate your tasks and make your job easier. Starting with an introduction to the basics of PowerCLI, the book will teach you how to manage your vSphere and vCloud infrastructure from the command line. To help you manage a vSphere host overall, you will learn how to manage vSphere ESXi hosts, host profiles, host services, host firewall, and deploy and upgrade ESXi hosts using Image Builder and Auto Deploy. The next chapter will not only teach you how to create datastore and datastore clusters, but you’ll also work with profile-driven and policy-based storage to manage your storage. To create a disaster recovery solution and retrieve information from vRealize Operations, you will learn how to use Site Recovery Manager and vRealize Operations respectively. Towards the end, you’ll see how to use the REST APIs from PowerShell to manage NSX and vRealize Automation and create patch baselines, scan hosts against the baselines for missing patches, and re-mediate hosts. By the end of the book, you will be capable of using the best tool to automate the management and configuration of VMware vSphere.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Learning PowerCLI Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Using standard port groups


Port groups are collections of ports that have the same properties, such as the same virtual switch, VLAN ID, Teaming policy, policies for filtering, tagging, and traffic shaping. Port groups are identified by a network label name. You should give all port groups in a data center, which are connected to the same network, the same network label. This will make virtual machine configurations portable across hosts. Using the PowerCLI cmdlets, you can only specify a network label name for the port group and a VLAN ID.

Note

A Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) is a virtual computer network independent of physical location. All of the computers in a VLAN can receive broadcasts from the others and are usually in the same IP subnet.

Creating standard port groups

The New-VirtualPortGroup cmdlet will create a new port group for a vSphere Standard Switch. The syntax of this cmdlet is as follows:

New-VirtualPortGroup [-Name] <String> [-VirtualSwitch]
    <VirtualSwitch...