Still running vRA 6.x, then you will be happy to hear vRA 6.2.5 is now GA and boast some great performance improvements. See blow for more details.
GA Date:11/17/16
Continue reading “Release Announcement – vRealize Automation 6.2.5”
Still running vRA 6.x, then you will be happy to hear vRA 6.2.5 is now GA and boast some great performance improvements. See blow for more details.
GA Date:11/17/16
Continue reading “Release Announcement – vRealize Automation 6.2.5”
The default behavior in vCAC when destroying a vSphere virtual machine is to delete it completely and permanently. In some environments and use cases, this may not be desired. Luckily, vCAC allows you to change this behavior. Instead of deleting them when they are destroyed, you can configure vCAC to power off virtual machines and move them to a folder called VRMDeleted in the vSphere Datacenter root (if this folder doesn’t exist, vCAC will create it on first use). This can be especially helpful if you are troubleshooting post-provisioning or guest customization problems, as you will be able to investigate inside the guest operating system after the failure.
This setting is changed on the vSphere Proxy Agent for each vCenter you would like to affect. To “turn off doDeletes”, perform the following steps:
DynamicOps.Vrm.VRMencrypt.exe VRMAgent.exe.config set doDeletes false