What is the maximum supported roundtrip latency between VMware Cloud Gateway and VMware SDDC Manager?
The maximum supported roundtrip latency between VMware Cloud Gateway and VMware SDDC Manager is 30 ms. This latency requirement ensures reliable communication and performance for management tasks between the Cloud Gateway and SDDC Manager in a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment. Latency beyond 30 ms may lead to degraded performance or connectivity issues.
An administrator has been tasked with increasing the available capacity within an existing VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment to support the deployment of production workloads. The VCF environment consists of a single VI Workload Domain (which is using vSphere Lifecycle Manager images as the update method) with only a single vSAN Cluster called Prod-01. Two new hosts have been added to SDDC Manager inventory for the capacity expansion. The new hosts have identically configured CPU and RAM to the hosts in Prod-01. VMFS on FC is the required principal storage option.
Which process must the administrator complete to increase the available capacity without the need for additional management components?
Since the goal is to increase capacity in the existing VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment without adding new management components, the most straightforward approach is to expand the existing Prod-01 cluster by adding the additional hosts. This approach will incorporate the new hosts into the existing VI Workload Domain and vSAN cluster without needing to create new clusters or workload domains.
What is the reason to use a custom profile type when deploying an NSX Edge cluster via SDDC Manager?
In VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF), a custom profile type is used when deploying an NSX Edge cluster if the environment requires specific configurations, such as Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD). BFD is used to detect link failures quickly, especially in dynamic routing environments, and requires custom configuration that is not part of the standard NSX Edge deployment profiles provided by SDDC Manager.
Which two steps would an administrator complete to upgrade the components of a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) aware Aria Suite? (Choose two.)
In a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment, the process for upgrading Aria Suite components (formerly vRealize Suite) and Aria Suite Lifecycle is as follows:
1. Upgrade Aria Suite components through Aria Suite Lifecycle: Aria Suite Lifecycle is the designated tool for managing and upgrading individual Aria Suite components, ensuring they are properly updated and maintained within VCF.
2. Upgrade Aria Suite Lifecycle through the SDDC Manager: SDDC Manager manages the lifecycle of Aria Suite Lifecycle itself to ensure compatibility with the VCF stack.
An administrator is planning to upgrade an existing VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment:
* 2 VCF instances across 2 sites
* NSX Federated environment
* 1 VMware Cloud Director instance at each site
* Aria suite at each site
Which three components can be upgraded as part of the VCF automated lifecycle management via SDDC manager? (Choose three.)
In a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) environment, SDDC Manager automates the lifecycle management of key infrastructure components. The components that can be upgraded through SDDC Manager's automated lifecycle management include:
1. VMware ESXi Hosts: SDDC Manager can manage and automate the upgrade of ESXi hosts across the VCF environment.
2. VMware NSX Local Managers: Local NSX Managers at each site are managed and upgraded by SDDC Manager as part of the VCF lifecycle management.
3. VMware Aria Suite Lifecycle: The Aria Suite Lifecycle (formerly vRealize Suite Lifecycle) can also be upgraded via SDDC Manager to maintain compatibility with VCF.
Maybelle
10 hours agoSherita
12 days agoVivan
14 days agoDwight
16 days agoBeatriz
27 days agoMila
1 months agoJamal
1 months agoBev
1 months agoShawnda
1 months ago