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VMware vRealize Orchestrator Cookbook

You're reading from   VMware vRealize Orchestrator Cookbook Over 90 recipes to satisfy all your automation needs and leverage vRealize Orchestrator 7.1 for your projects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786462787
Length 556 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniel Langenhan Daniel Langenhan
Author Profile Icon Daniel Langenhan
Daniel Langenhan
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing and Configuring Orchestrator FREE CHAPTER 2. Optimizing Orchestrator Configuration 3. Distributed Design 4. Programming Skills 5. Visual Programming 6. Advanced Programming 7. Interacting with Orchestrator 8. Better Workflows and Optimized Working 9. Essential Plugins 10. Built-in Plugins 11. Additional Plugins 12. Working with vSphere 13. Working with vRealize Automation

Turning strings into objects


In this recipe, we will take a quick look at how to turn a string into an Orchestrator object (such as VC:VirtualMachine). This technique is rather important when you use REST to start workflows.

Getting ready

We only need the Orchestrator Client with the right to create a workflow.

How to do it...

In this example, we turn a string into VC:VirtualMachine:

  1. Create a workflow with a string input (vmString) and a VC:VirtualMachine output (vmObject).

  2. Add a scriptable task and connect the in- and output parameter.

  3. In the script, enter the following code:

          query = "xpath:name='" + vmString + "'"; 
          vms=Server.findAllForType("VC:VirtualMachine", query); 
          vmObject=vms[0]; 
    
  4. Run the workflow and enter a Virtual Machine name.

  5. Check the output and logs.

How it works...

The find function looks for all elements of a given type and can be limited using a search function. It's very important to write the correct type and the search string.

The next important...

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