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by Duncan Epping

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Cleaning up old vSAN File Services OVF files on vCenter Server

Duncan Epping · Oct 3, 2022 ·

There was a question last week about the vSAN File Services OVF Files, the question was about the location where they were stored. I did some digging in the past, but I don’t think I ever shared this. The vSAN File Services OVF is stored on vCenter Server (VCSA) in a folder, for each version. The folder structure looks as show below, basically each version of an OVF has a directory with required OVF files.

root@vcsa-duncan [ ~ ]# ls -lha /storage/updatemgr/vsan/fileService/

total 24K

vsan-health users 4.0K Sep 16 16:09 .

vsan-health root  4.0K Nov 11  2020 ..

vsan-health users 4.0K Nov 11  2020 ovf-7.0.1.1000

vsan-health users 4.0K Mar 12  2021 ovf-7.0.2.1000-17692909

vsan-health users 4.0K Nov 24  2021 ovf-7.0.3.1000-18502520

vsan-health users 4.0K Sep 16 16:09 ovf-7.0.3.1000-20036589

root@vcsa-duncan [ ~ ]# ls -lha /storage/updatemgr/vsan/fileService/ovf-7.0.1.1000/

total 1.2G

vsan-health users 4.0K Nov 11  2020 .

vsan-health users 4.0K Sep 16 16:09 ..

vsan-health users 179M Nov 11  2020 VMware-vSAN-File-Services-Appliance-7.0.1.1000-16695758-cloud-components.vmdk

vsan-health users 5.9M Nov 11  2020 VMware-vSAN-File-Services-Appliance-7.0.1.1000-16695758-log.vmdk

vsan-health users  573 Nov 11  2020 VMware-vSAN-File-Services-Appliance-7.0.1.1000-16695758_OVF10.mf

vsan-health users  60K Nov 11  2020 VMware-vSAN-File-Services-Appliance-7.0.1.1000-16695758_OVF10.ovf

vsan-health users 998M Nov 11  2020 VMware-vSAN-File-Services-Appliance-7.0.1.1000-16695758-system.vmdk

I’ve asked the engineering team, and yes, you can simply delete obsolete versions if you need the disk capacity.

How to convert a standard cluster to a stretched cluster while expanding it!

Duncan Epping · Sep 27, 2022 ·

On VMTN a question was asked about how you could convert a 5-node standard cluster to a stretched cluster. It is not documented in our regular documentation, probably as the process is pretty straightforward, so I figured I would write it down. When you create a stretched cluster you will need a Witness Appliance in a third location first. I would recommend deploying that Witness Appliance before doing anything else.

After you deployed the Witness Appliance add the additional hosts to vCenter Server. DO NOT yet add them to the cluster yet though! First, configure each host separately. After you have configured each host, place the host into maintenance mode. After the host is placed into maintenance mode, move it into the cluster and do not take it out of maintenance mode!

Now, when all hosts are part of the cluster you can create the Stretched Cluster. This process is simple, you pick the hosts that belong to each location, and then you select the witness. After the cluster has been created you simply take the hosts out of maintenance mode and you should be good! Note, you take the host out of maintenance after the Stretched Cluster has been created to ensure that you don’t have any rebalancing happening while you are creating the stretched cluster. Simply avoiding unneeded resyncs from occuring.

Do note, all VMs will have the same storage policy assigned still, so you will need to change that policy to ensure that the vSAN objects are placed and replicated according to your requirements! (RAID1 across locations and RAID-1/5/6 within a location for instance.)

Running with power, using a Stryd footpod

Duncan Epping · Sep 21, 2022 ·

A month ago or so I posted a thread on twitter that discusses my experience of using the Stryd footpod. I figured I would dump it in a blog post so that it doesn’t get lost. I’ve noticed various questions on twitter and facebook groups lately about the Stryd footpod and running with power. Questions that can easily be answered in my opinion, I will add some of those basic questions to the end of this blog.

So what is Stryd and what does it provide? Stryd is a hardware device, that contains many sensors, combined with an ML/analytics platform. The hardware device is a footpod, and it measures your output and running capabilities. That data is then analyzed and your specific training zones are calculated and race results can be estimated. These training zones can then be used to improve your endurance and pace using a single metric!

Stryd displays watts as their key metric, very similar to what a cyclist sees when using a power meter. The benefit of this is that you can use this “watt” metric to for instance pace a race, run intervals, or run a full workout at a particular effort. Of course, you could use pace ranges as well or heart rate, and people have been doing that for many years. However, heart rate typically takes time to ramp up, so during an interval the delay of the heart rate could mean you run in the wrong zone (too slow, or too fast). Pace ranges avoid that problem, but you’ll need to understand your capabilities extremely well to determine those ranges in combination with effort. This can be challenging for advanced runners, let alone beginning runners. [Read more…] about Running with power, using a Stryd footpod

VMware Converter is back!

Duncan Epping · Sep 16, 2022 ·

William already reported on it a few days ago, and I just noticed it on VMTN that VMware vCenter Converter Standalone is back, or better said in beta! If you are a customer who already has access to the beta community, simply go to this link: vCenter Convert Beta Community to get access to the community and the download/releasenotes. If you don’t have access to the beta community, register for it via the following registration page: https://www.vmware.com/learn/1645300_REG.html, and download vCenter Converter!

<update>Available now: https://www.vmware.com/products/converter.html

I just went to the community and looked at the release notes and wanted to share some details with you:

  • VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 6.3.0 (GA) | 11 October 2022
  • You cannot upgrade to VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 6.3.0 from previous versions. If you have a previous version of Converter Standalone installed, uninstall it and then install Converter Standalone 6.3.0
  • You can install Converter on:
    • Windows Server 2012 (64-bit
    • Windows 8.1 (32-bit and 64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2012 R2 (64-bit)
    • Windows 10 (32-bit and 64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2016 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2019 (64-bit)
    • Windows 11 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2022 (64-bit)
  • VMware Converter Standalone can convert offline virtual machines from the following Hyper-V servers:
    • Windows Server 2012 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2012 R2 (64-bit)
    • Windows 10 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2016 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2019 (64-bit)
    • Windows 11 (64-bit)
    • Windows Server 2022 (64-bit)
  • VMware Converter Standalone can convert offline virtual machines from the following VMware products and versions:
    • VMware vSphere 6.5 (Update 3)
    • VMware vSphere 6.7 (Update 3)
    • VMware vSphere 7.0 + Update 1 + Update 2 + Update 3
    • VMware Workstation 16.x
    • VMware Fusion 12.x

Of course I downloaded the build and installed it on my Windows host, and it is up and running. Time to convert some machines!

As mentioned by William, the focus was very much on getting a new version out which was fully supported and developed using the latest frameworks. Next, the focus will be on adding new functionality and support for other platforms. I can’t wait for the next version!

VMware announces Ransomware Recovery as a Service and Data Protection vision!

Duncan Epping · Sep 13, 2022 ·

At VMware Explore there was a whole session (CEIB1236US) dedicated to the vision for Data Protection and Ransomware Recovery as a Service. Especially the Ransomware Recovery as a Service had my interest as it is something that keeps coming up with customers. How do I protect my data, and when needed how do recover? Probably a year ago or so I had a conversation with VMware CTO for Cloud Storage and Data (Sazzala) on this topic, and we met up with various customers to gather requirements. Those discussions ultimately led to the roadmap for this new service and new features. Below I am going to summarize what was discussed in this session at VMware Explore, but I would urge you to watch the session as it is very valuable, and it is impossible for me to capture everything.

VMware’s Disaster Recovery as a Service solution is a unique offering as it provides the best of both worlds when it comes to Disaster Recovery. With DR you typically have two options:

  1. Fast recovery, relatively high cost.
    • Traditionally most customers went for this option, they had a “hot standby” environment that provided full capacity in case of emergency. But as this environment is always up and running and underutilized, it is a significant overhead.
  2. Slower recovery, relatively low cost.
    • This is where VMs are replicated to cheap and deep storage and compute resources are limited (if available at all). When a recovery needs to happen, data rehydration is required and as such, it is a relatively slow process.

With VMware’s offering, you now have a 3rd option: Fast recovery, at a relatively low cost! VMware provides the ability to store backups on cheap storage, and then recover (without hydration) directly in a cloud-based SDDC. It provides a lot of flexibility, as you can have a minimum set of hosts constantly running within your prepared SDDC, and scale out when needed during a failure, or you can even create a full SDDC at the time of recovery.

Now, this offering is available in VMware Cloud on AWS in various regions. During the session, the intention was also shared to deliver similar capabilities on Azure VMware Solution, Oracle Cloud VMware Solution, Google Cloud VMware Engine, and/or Alibaba Cloud VMware Service. Basically all global hyper-scalers. Maybe even more important, VMware also discussed additional capabilities that are being worked on. Scaling to tens of thousands of VMs, managing multi-petabytes of storage, providing 1-minute RPO levels, proving multi-VM consistency, having end-to-end SLA observability, providing advanced insights into cost and usage, and probably most important… a full REST API.

All of those enhancements are very useful for those aiming to recover from a disaster, not just natural disasters, but also for Ransomware attacks. Some of you may wonder how common a ransomware attack is, but unfortunately, it is very common. Surveys have revealed that 60% of the surveyed organizations were hit by ransomware in the past 12 months, 92% of those who paid the ransom did not gain full access to the data, and the average downtime was 16 days. Those are some scary numbers in my opinion. Especially the downtime associated with an attack, and the fact that full access was not regained even after paying a ransom.

In general recovery from ransomware is complex as ransomware typically remains undetected for larger periods of time before you are exposed to it. Then when you are exposed you don’t have too many options, you recover to a healthy point in time or you pay the ransom. When you recover, of course, you want to know if the set you are recovering is infected or not. You also want to have some indication of when the environment was infected, as no one wants to go through 3 months of snapshots before you find the right one. That alone would take days, if not weeks, and downtime is extremely expensive. This is where VMware Ransomware Recovery for VMware Cloud DR comes in.

The aim for the VMware Ransomware Recovery for VMware Cloud DR solution is to provide the ability to recover to an Isolated Recovery Environment (including networking). This first of all prevents reinfection at the time of recovery. During the recovery process, the environment is also analyzed by a next-generation anti-virus scanner for known/current threats. Simply to prevent a situation where you recover a snapshot that was infected. What I am even more impressed by is that the plan is to also include a visual indication of when most likely an environment was infected, this is done by providing an insight into the data change rate and entropy. Now, entropy is not a word most non-native speakers are familiar with, I wasn’t, but it refers to the randomness of the data. Both the change rate and the entropy could indicate abnormal patterns, which then could indicate the time of infection and help identify a healthy snapshot to recover!

As mentioned, during recovery the snapshot is scanned by a Next-Gen AV, and of course, when infections are detected they will be reported in the UI. This then provides you the option to discard the recovery and select a different snapshot. Even if no vulnerabilities are found the environment can be powered on fully isolated, providing you the ability to manually inspect before exposing app owners, or end-users, to the environment again.


Now comes the cool part, when you have curated the environment, when you are absolutely sure this is a healthy point in time that was not infected, you have the choice to fallback to your “source” environment or simply remain running in your VMware Cloud while you clean up your “source” site. Before I forget, I’ve been talking about full environments and VMs so far, but of course, it is also the intention to provide the ability to restore files and folders of course! All in all, a very impressive solution that should be available in the near future.

If you are interested in these capabilities and would like to stay informed, please fill out this form: https://forms.office.com/r/yh69Npq7nY.

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About the Author

Duncan Epping is a Chief Technologist and Distinguished Engineering Architect at Broadcom. Besides writing on Yellow-Bricks, Duncan is the co-author of the vSAN Deep Dive and the vSphere Clustering Deep Dive book series. Duncan is also the host of the Unexplored Territory Podcast.

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