Book Image

Learning VMware vRealize Operations Manager [Video]

By : Chris Slater, Scott Norris
Book Image

Learning VMware vRealize Operations Manager [Video]

By: Chris Slater, Scott Norris

Overview of this book

<p>vRealize Operations Manager is used to analyze and process data from different sources into a single repository, thus allowing you to understand every layer of your environment.</p> <p>This course will start off by diving into the basics of how to read and manage vRealize Operations, from understanding the layout of the UI, granting people access, bring data into vRealize Operations with solutions and understanding the badge system. This introduction to the basics will build a solid foundation on which we will further build with later modules.It will move beyond the standard product documentation and explain both why and how vRealize Operations should be deployed, configured, and used in your environment. The targeted version of this course is 6.3.x, but it is backward-compatible down to version 6.0.</p> <p>This course will help you gain a deep understanding of vRealize Operations and will teach you how to best apply the product to everyday operations management use cases.</p> <h1>Style and Approach</h1> <p>This is a learning-level course that is designed such that beginners get up to speed with using the vRealize Operations Manager. It is packed with sections that range in skill level and expertise, as well as useful theory versus practical step-by-step content to help viewers work with ease.</p>
Table of Contents (7 chapters)
Chapter 3
Security
Content Locked
Section 5
vCenter Users and Groups
If I can add users from Active Directory, what permission do vCenter users have if they are logging in with their vSphere credentials? How do vCenter users differ from other vROps users and groups and when should I use them? - Navigate to the Access Control Menu under Administration - Under the users tab, you can see any users who have logged in with vSphere credentials - vCenter users only have access to vSphere objects; for access to all objects, use vROps users and groups