VMware NSX for Disaster Recovery - Day 1 brings together the knowledge and guidance for planning, designing, and
implementing a disaster recovery architecture for the software-defined data center that meets the needs of your
business. VMware NSX simplifies the DR planning and testing that goes into a resilient infrastructure and drastically reduces the time it takes to recover from an event. It enables true workload portability between data centers, private clouds or public clouds. NSX has helped enterprises recover from natural disasters and outages as well as simplifying the mergers and acquisitions of organizations and their networks. VMware NSX for Disaster Recovery - Day 1 is your roadmap to create a robust network infrastructure within software-defined data centers running NSX. You will find insights and recommendations proven in the field for moving your organization to a resilient, highly available architecture based on VMware NSX.
The realm of technology is one that has traditionally been constructed on silos. We tend to fragment our skills into very specific areas of expertise, even going so far as to isolate the very people who run data center and
cloud operations into little buckets of focus and energy. I’d like to think that this, more than anything, was the root cause for such painfully slow progress towards realizing the dream of a fully software defined data center. I had always felt a bit stifled by this organizational fragmentation and thirsted for a way to put my hands on just about any solution that shows the promise of removing the burden of manual processes. Since you’re reading this book, I’ll make the assumption that you have had similar thoughts.
VMware vSphere 8.0 is available in the following languages:
• English
• Italian
• French
• German
• Spanish
• Japanese
• Korean
• Simplified Chinese
• Traditional Chinese
Components of vSphere 8.0, including vCenter Server, ESXi, the vSphere Client, and the VMware Host Client, do not
accept non-ASCII input.
Compatibility
Virtual Machine Compatibility for ESXi
Virtual machines that are compatible with ESX 3.x and later (hardware version 4) are supported with ESXi 8.0. Virtual
machines that are compatible with ESX 2.x and later (hardware version 3) are not supported. To use such virtual
machines on ESXi 8.0, upgrade the virtual machine compatibility. See the ESXi Upgrade documentation.
Guest Operating System Compatibility for ESXi
To determine which guest operating systems are compatible with vSphere 8.0, use the ESXi 8.0 information in
the VMware Compatibility Guide.
The following guest operating system releases are deprecated or terminated in this release. Future vSphere releases will
not support these guest operating systems:
• Windows Vista, Windows 2003 / R2, Windows XP: Deprecated
• Oracle Linux 5.x: Deprecated
• Oracle Linux 4.9: Terminated
• CentOS 5.x: Deprecated
• Asianux 3.0: Deprecated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 SP4: Terminated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP4: Deprecated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12: Deprecated
• Ubuntu releases 12.04, 18.10, 19.04 and 19.10: Terminated
• Debian 7.x and 8.x: Deprecated
• Debian 6.0: Terminated
• Photon OS 1.0: Terminated
• Flatcar Container Linux non-LTS releases: Terminated
• All OS X and macOS releases: Terminated
• FreeBSD 9.x and 10.x: Deprecated
• FreeBSD 7.x and 8.x: Terminated
• Solaris 10.x: Deprecated
• All eComStation releases: Terminated
• All SCO releases: Terminated
VMware by Broadcom 75VMware vSphere 8.0
• All CoreOS releases: Terminated
Device Compatibility for ESXi
To determine which devices are compatible with ESXi 8.0, use the ESXi 8.0 information in the VMware Compatibility
Guide.
Hardware Compatibility for ESXi
To view a list of processors, storage devices, SAN arrays, and I/O devices that are compatible with vSphere 8.0, use the
ESXi 8.0 information in the VMware Compatibility Guide.
ESXi and vCenter Server Version Compatibility
The VMware Product Interoperability Matrix provides details about the compatibility of current and earlier versions
of VMware vSphere components, including ESXi, VMware vCenter Server, and optional VMware products. Check
the VMware Product Interoperability Matrix also for information about supported management and backup agents before
you install ESXi or vCenter Server.
The vSphere Lifecycle Manager and vSphere Client are packaged with vCenter Serve
VMware vSphere 9.0 is available in the following languages:
• English
• Italian
• French
• German
• Spanish
• Japanese
• Korean
• Simplified Chinese
• Traditional Chinese
Components of vSphere 9.0, including vCenter Server, ESXi, the vSphere Client, and the VMware Host Client, do not
accept non-ASCII input.
Compatibility Virtual Machine Compatibility for ESXi
Virtual machines that are compatible with ESX 3.x and later (hardware version 4) are supported with ESXi 9.0. Virtual machines that are compatible with ESX 2.x and later (hardware version 3) are not supported. To use such virtual machines on ESXi 9.0, upgrade the virtual machine compatibility. See the ESXi Upgrade documentation.
Guest Operating System Compatibility for ESXi To determine which guest operating systems are compatible with vSphere 9.0, use the ESXi 9.0 information in
the VMware Compatibility Guide.
The following guest operating system releases are deprecated or terminated in this release. Future vSphere releases will not support these guest operating systems:
• Windows Vista, Windows 2003 / R2, Windows XP: Deprecated
• Oracle Linux 5.x: Deprecated
• Oracle Linux 4.9: Terminated
• CentOS 5.x: Deprecated
• Asianux 3.0: Deprecated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 SP4: Terminated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP4: Deprecated
• SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12: Deprecated
• Ubuntu releases 12.04, 18.10, 19.04 and 19.10: Terminated
• Debian 7.x and 8.x: Deprecated
• Debian 6.0: Terminated
• Photon OS 1.0: Terminated
• Flatcar Container Linux non-LTS releases: Terminated
• All OS X and macOS releases: Terminated
• FreeBSD 9.x and 10.x: Deprecated
• FreeBSD 7.x and 8.x: Terminated
• Solaris 10.x: Deprecated
• All eComStation releases: Terminated
• All SCO releases: Terminated
VMware by Broadcom 75 VMware vSphere 9.0
• All CoreOS releases: Terminated
Device Compatibility for ESXi To determine which devices are compatible with ESXi 9.0, use the ESXi 9.0 information in the VMware Compatibility Guide.
Hardware Compatibility for ESXi
To view a list of processors, storage devices, SAN arrays, and I/O devices that are compatible with vSphere 9.0, use the ESXi 9.0 information in the VMware Compatibility Guide.
ESXi and vCenter Server Version Compatibility The VMware Product Interoperability Matrix provides details about the compatibility of current and earlier versions of VMware vSphere components, including ESXi, VMware vCenter Server, and optional VMware products. Check the VMware Product Interoperability Matrix also for information about supported management and backup agents before you install ESXi or vCenter Server.
The vSphere Lifecycle Manager and vSphere Client are packaged with vCenter Server
It’s hard to believe how far we’ve come in the virtualization industry. What was once considered
a niche technology used only for development and testing is now used for production work-
loads and even business-critical applications. The VMware vSphere platform is capable of sup-
porting nearly any virtualized workload with very few obstacles standing in the way of close to
100 percent virtualization.
Today’s workloads are more demanding than ever before. Email servers frequently require
large amounts of memory and CPU resources in order to handle the large volume of email that
we all deal with on a daily basis. Database servers often require large amounts of memory and
storage resources, from a capacity perspective as well as performance, to meet the demands of
a business. And newer technologies, such as virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), have intro-
duced signii cant demand for resources in vSphere environments.
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