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PowerCLI Cookbook

You're reading from   PowerCLI Cookbook Over 75 step-by-step recipes to put PowerCLI into action for efficient administration of your virtual environment

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784393724
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Philip Brandon Sellers Philip Brandon Sellers
Author Profile Icon Philip Brandon Sellers
Philip Brandon Sellers
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring the Basic Settings of an ESXi Host with PowerCLI 2. Configuring vCenter and Computing Clusters FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Virtual Machines 4. Working with Datastores and Datastore Clusters 5. Creating and Managing Snapshots 6. Managing Resource Pools, Reservations, and Limits for Virtual Machines 7. Creating Custom Reports and Notifications for vSphere 8. Performing ESXCLI and in-guest Commands from PowerCLI 9. Managing DRS and Affinity Groups using PowerCLI 10. Working with vCloud Director from PowerCLI A. Setting up and Configuring vCloud Director Index

Introduction


Virtual machines are not static. Virtual workloads change by the minute and vSphere has a lot of features that help administrators handle those dynamic workloads. Log files and growing datasets cause virtual machines to run out of disk space. Fortunately, administrators can easily grow the VMDK files and allocate more disk space to the virtual machine, which was covered in the Increasing the disk space in a virtual machine recipe in Chapter 3, Managing Virtual Machines.

As several virtual machines increases their disk space, the datastore where they reside might begin to run low on space. Virtual machine snapshots can also constrain the amount of available disk space. Thin provisioned disks in an over-provisioned datastore can completely exhaust the available space. All of these reasons cause administrators to be faced with the manual task of rebalancing virtual machines across datastores.

In early versions of vSphere, the only way to balance datastores was an offline migration...

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