You can set up virtual serial ports connections for vSphere virtual machines in several ways. The connection method that you select depends on the task that you need to accomplish.
You can set up virtual serial ports to send data in the following ways.
Physical serial port on the host | Sets the virtual machine to use a physical serial port on the host computer. This method is useful for using an external modem or a hand-held device in a virtual machine. |
Output to file | Sends output from the virtual serial port to a file on the host computer. This method is useful for capturing the data that a program running in the virtual machine sends to the virtual serial port. |
Connect to a named pipe | Sets a direct connection between two virtual machines or a connection between a virtual machine and an application on the host computer. With this method, two virtual machines or a virtual machine and a process on the host can communicate as if they were physical machines connected by a serial cable. For example, you can use this option for remote debugging on a virtual machine. Sap crystal reports 2013 download. See the capabilities of SAP Crystal Reports and license types of SAP Crystal. SAP Crystal Server 2016 is available as Named User Licences (NUL) that can be. The following versions of Microsoft Visual Studio: 2017, 2015, 2013, 2012, 2010. Contract can download updates through the SAP Service Marketplace (login. Design and deliver powerful, flexible reports that enable timely, fact-based decision making. Cartoon Network Is The Only Place To Watch Ben 10 and Play Ben 10 Games - Find Out What Alien The Omnitrix Watch Will Turn Ben 10 Into Next! Ben Tennyson is on summer vacation with his cousin Gwen and Grandpa Max in the Rustbucket RV. But when he discovers the alien device known as the Omnitrix, he gets the ability to turn into ten different alien heroes. Use the powers of Four Arms, Heatblast, XLR8, Diamondhead. Ben 10 Only On Cartoon Network - Find Out More About The New Series And Check Out Our Free Ben 10 Games, Quiz & Videos Here. Download Ben 10 Original Series Season 1. Download Link: Click here to Download. Subscribe to my channel on YouTube- My Channel. To extract the.rar file. Ben 10 free download episodes. The is No Need of Downloading The episodes of Ben 10 When You can get It online itself that to all the episode at One Place. You can watch it at any time. |
Connect over the network | Enables a serial connection to and from a virtual machine's serial port over the network. The Virtual Serial Port Concentrator (vSPC) aggregates traffic from multiple serial ports onto one management console. vSPC behavior is similar to physical serial port concentrators. Using a vSPC also allows network connections to a virtual machine's serial ports to migrate seamlessly when you use vMotion to migrate the virtual machine. For requirements and steps to configure the Avocent ACS v6000 virtual serial port concentrator, see http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1022303. Get hyped for the release with a full rundown of all the game modes included in the upcoming fighting game. In fighting games, the quality of the fighting mechanics only goes so far; you need to have a lot of fun modes in which to do the fighting, too. That's why has a huge story mode, endless single-player challenges and a full loot system. All tekken games. |
You can select a client or server connection for serial ports. Your selection determines whether the system waits for a connection or initiates it. Typically, to control a virtual machine over a serial port, you select a server connection. This selection allows you to control the connections, which is useful if you connect to the virtual machine only occasionally. To use a serial port for logging, select a client connection. This selection allows the virtual machine to connect to the logging server when the virtual machine starts and to disconnect when it stops.
Before you connect network-backed virtual serial ports, you must add one of the following firewall rule sets to prevent the firewall from blocking traffic:
■ | VM serial port connected over network. Use to connect the serial port output through a network without the virtual serial port concentrator. |
Do not change the allowed IP list for either rule set. Updates to the IP list can affect other network services that might be blocked by the firewall.
For details about adding rule sets to a firewall, see the vSphere Security documentation.
When you use a physical serial port for serial port passthrough from an ESXi host to a virtual machine, the following conditions apply:
Supported |
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Serial ports that are integrated into the motherboard |
Serial ports connected through USB are not supported for serial port passthrough. They might be supported by USB passthrough from an ESXi host to a virtual machine. See USB Configuration from an ESXi Host to a Virtual Machine. |
As of this writing, vCenter 6.5.0d has been released which gives me the opportunity to update my lab’s vCSA (vCenter Server Appliance) to this latest release and write about it as well. The update process has been greatly simplified thanks to the Appliance Management tool which is also used to manage the appliance’s configuration or parts of it. In today’s post, I’ll take you through the three methods you can use to update vCSA using the Appliance Management tool.
Before trying out any of these methods, make sure to snapshot and/or take a backup of the appliance just in case the update fails. While writing this post, I successfully reverted back to snapshot a number of times not because any of the update methods failed but because I had to make sure that each of the methods covered here worked flawlessly. So, do yourself a favor and snapshot your appliance more so if it’s being used for production.
This method works only if the appliance has Internet connectivity (ports 80,443) which it needs to connect to VMware’s online repositories.
To start with, point your browser to https://<vCSA IP Address or hostname>:5480 and log in as root. Remember that we’re accessing the appliance itself and not the vCenter Server component so user accounts like [email protected] will not work.
Figure 2 – The Appliance Management tool used to configure and update vCSA
After you log in, click on Update and hit the Settings button as shown in Fig. 3.
Fromthe Update Settings dialog, you can either use the default VMware repository URL or specify one yourself. The default repository is automatically points to the latest appliance update as shown in Fig. 4. You can also schedule the time at which the vCSA polls for updates. This, however, does not imply that updates are automatically downloaded.
Figure 4 – Link to the latest available vCSA update is set automatically
If the Check for updates automatically option is ticked off, click on Check Updates and select Check Repository. This will poll the VMware repository for the latest available update and display the link as such. Expanding More Details, will reveal more information on the update being installed along with a link to the KB article describing it. When required, use this link to correlate the current version with that being updated.
Figure 5 – Manually checking for the latest update. Full details for update are also displayed.
Updating the appliance, is a simple matter of clicking on Install Updates and selecting Install All Updates as per Fig. 6.
The upgrade process may take a while and at times you may think it’s actually stuck. Just remember that the process needs to download 1.5GB worth of file which can take time depending on the environment, available bandwidth and what not. In my case – nested environment on a heavily used ESXi host – , 40 minutes into the update and the installer was still stuck at 40%.
To verify that the vCSA was actually doing something, I logged on the vCenter Server hosting it using the vSphere Web Client. I then checked the vCSA VM’s network performance graph for any signs of activity. As shown in Fig. 7, the VM was pretty busy on the networking front with activity spiking immediately as soon as the update kicked in.
Figure 7 – Network activity on the vCSA’s VM indicating that the update is being downloaded
At one point, the installer lost connectivity to the appliance – probably because it timed out – so I wasn’t quite sure if the update completed successfully. If this happens, SSH to the vCSA and check the contents of a log file called software-packages.log which you’ll find under /storage/log/vmware/applmgmt. Run the following command:
Figure 8 – Checking the software-packages log file to determine the result of the update
If the update completed successfully, you should see a line containing Packages upgraded successfully, reboot is required. If that’s the case, proceed with rebooting the appliance so the changes can take root. If not, scour the log file for hints as to what went wrong and revert back to snapshot. This is all shown in the video below. The appliance’s version will read to the latest even though the appliance needs to be rebooted. You can verify this from the Appliance Management tool and the vCSA’s console.
If Internet access is denied to the appliance, which is pretty normal in production environments, you’ll need to download the update manually and use one of the two methods described next.
The ISO Method
You first need to download the vCSA update – as an ISO file – from https://my.vmware.com/group/vmware/patch#search. To download the update, you need to sign up for a VMware account unless you already have. Once you do that, select VC followed by the latest version from the drop-down menus as shown in Fig.9, marked 1 and 2. Then, select the latest available update by ticking the box next to it (3) and click on Download (4).
Figure 9 – Downloading the vCSA update as an ISO image
As shown in Fig. 10, I’ve uploaded the ISO file to a datastore on the ESXi host where the vCSA VM resides. I then mounted it as a CD/DVD drive from the vCSA VM’s settings. The same update process is repeated using the Appliance Management tool.
Select the Check CDROM update option to verify the ISO image, the details for which are displayed on the Update screen. If all’s well and good, select Install CDROM Updates (4) to run the update process.
Figure 10 – Updating the appliance using a locally mounted ISO image
Updating from ISO, reduces the time taken to update the appliance mainly because there are no update files to download.
This time round, there were no time-outs and the appliance update took only 5 minutes to successfully complete. The appliance is then rebooted by clicking OK – which brings up another dialog box prompting for a reboot – or via the Reboot button on the Summary page.
Figure 12 – A successful update! An appliance reboot is mandatory.
The Web Server Method
If complicating matters is your thing, here’s an alternative method you can try. This time, you need to download the vCSA update bundle which is a zipped archive. This, pretty much, contains the same RPM packages comprising the ISO file save for a couple of manifest files. The zip file is downloadable from my.vmware.com from the VMware vCenter Server 6.5.0d downloads section.
Figure 13 – The vCSA update bundle downloadable from my.vmware.com
The bundle is then extracted to the root folder of a web server. For this example, I’ve used IIS. I extracted the archive’s contents to c:inetpub as shown in Fig. 14 and modified the Default Web Site to point directly to it. Directory Browsing must be enabled for Default Website unless the setting is inherited.
Figure 14 – Extracting the update bundle to an IIS server and setting the default website to point to it
Lastly, you need to create MIME types for the .sign and .json files which the vCSA reads from the files present under the two folders – package-pool and manifest – extracted to c:inetpub.
Figure 16 – Manifest files from the extracted update bundle
To add new MIME types, just click on the MIME Types icon and add them via the Add link at the top-right corner or by right-clicking on the MIME Types page in IIS. Add the 2 new mime types as shown in Figure 17.
Note: This was tested on IIS 8 running on Windows Server 2012. Additional MIME types, perhaps for the RPM packages, may need to be created.
That’s all there is to it as far as IIS configuration is concerned. For authentication, I used anonymous which is enabled by default. You may wish to use other forms of authentication if security is a concern.
To update vCSA from the IIS repository, click on Updates, Settings and type in the IP address of the IIS server as shown below. Optionally, add a username and password if you set up any other form of authentication other than anonymous.
Figure 18 – Point the vCSA to download the update bundle from the IIS server
The appliance will upgrade identically to the previous methods used. On completion, you are once again asked to reboot.
Figure 19 – Rebooting the appliance after updating
Troubleshooting
You may come across a Download Failed error message when testing this method for the first time. This generally occurs due to 401 or 404 errors on the Web Server’s side. While testing this method, I took hints from the software-packages.log on the vCSA to iron out any problems I ran into. For instance, 404 errors told me that I needed to create mime types for the .sign and .json files since IIS, by default, doesn’t know about them which leads to a file not found error.
Below is an example of what you’ll see in the log file. The entries point to something wrong with how authentication is set up on IIS; I intentionally disabled anonymous authentication to reproduce the error.
As we’ve seen, updating vCenter Server Appliance is pretty easy, something you can do using any of the three methods outlined in this post. Regardless of the method used, it is always important to take a backup of the vCSA, and any other critical component for that matter, before updating or upgrading. There’s no guarantee that an update will succeed, so at the risk of repeating myself, being able to recover from a failed update or upgrade is paramount to business continuity and your sanity!