Client User Machine Requirements 18 Storage Requirements 19 Media Storage 19 Virtual Machine Storage (Datastore) 19 Network Requirements 20 Configuring Routing 20 Configuring Domains and Permissions 20 Configuring Firewall Settings 21 Gathering Network Information for Installation 22 IP Addresses for Virtual Machines 22 Configuring IIS and ASP.NET on a Lab Manager Server 22 Using Lab Manager with VirtualCenter Management Server 23 Installing Lab Manager 25 Reviewing the Installation Flow 26 Setting Up Managed Server Systems 27 Prerequisites for Managed Server Systems 27 Verifying the Setup of the ESX Server System 27 Configuring Additional Media Storage (NFS) Prior to Installing the Managed Server 28 VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Installing the Managed Server Agent Software on ESX Server 29 Setting Up the Lab Manager Server 31 Prerequisites for Lab Manager Server 31 Security Recommendations 31 Installing or Customizing the SSL Certificate 32 Modifying Security Policies 34 Configuring Internet Explorer on the Lab Manager Server 34 Setting Up a FQDN for the Server 35 Installing the Lab Manager Server Software 36 Verifying the ASP.NET Version 37 Initializing and Configuring Lab Manager 38 Checking the Sample Template and Configuration 40 Adding and Synchronizing Lab Manager Server with NFS Media Storage 41 Uninstalling Lab Manager 42 Uninstalling Managed Server Agent Software 42 Uninstalling Lab Manager Server 42 Troubleshooting the Installation 45 Error 1720: Windows Installer Package 46...
Preface This preface provides information about the VMware Lab Manager Installation Guide and ® links to VMware technical support and educational resources. This preface contains the following topics: “About This Book” on page 5 “Technical Support and Education Resources” on page 6 About This Book The VMware Lab Manager Installation Guide describes installation and configuration tasks for Lab Manager 2.4. Intended Audience The guide is intended for experienced developers and testers of software applications. This document assumes the user has some familiarity with these topics: Virtual machine technology Basic concepts of distributed, multitiered systems Current development and testing practices Windows and Linux operating systems VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Document Feedback If you have comments about this documentation, submit your feedback to: docfeedback@vmware.com Conventions Table P‐1 illustrates the typographic conventions used in this manual. Table P-1. Conventions in this Manual Style Elements Blue (online only) Cross‐references and email addresses Blue boldface (online only) Links Black boldface User interface elements such as button names and menu items Commands, filenames, directories, and paths Monospace User input Monospace bold Italic Document titles, glossary terms, and occasional emphasis < Name > Variable and parameter names Technical Support and Education Resources The following sections describe the technical support resources available to you.
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Preface Online and Telephone Support Use online support to submit technical support requests, view your product and contract information, and register your products. Go to http://www.vmware.com/support. Customers with appropriate support contracts should use telephone support for the fastest response on priority 1 issues. Go to http://www.vmware.com/support/phone_support.html. Support Offerings Find out how VMware support offerings can help meet your business needs. Go to http://www.vmware.com/support/services. VMware Education Services VMware courses offer extensive hands‐on labs, case study examples, and course materials designed to be used as on‐the‐job reference tools. For more information about VMware Education Services, go to http://mylearn1.vmware.com/mgrreg/index.cfm. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide VMware, Inc.
Introduction to the Lab Manager Installation VMware Lab Manager provides a robust solution to manage virtual machines in the test lab infrastructure. You can capture a complex and running software environment and share it instantly across your organization. See the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide for a full overview of the product. This chapter covers these topics: “Lab Manager Components” on page 10 “High‐Level View of the Installation Process” on page 11 VMware, Inc.
High-Level View of the Installation Process The installation process takes about 20 minutes and involves the high‐level tasks described in Table 1‐1. Table 1-1. Installation Tasks Preparing to install Lab Prepare your target system and make sure it meets all Manager software and hardware requirements. Creating Managed Server Set up the Managed Server systems. You must create systems at least one Managed Server before installing Lab Manager Server. Creating the Lab Manager Set up the Lab Manager Server. Server Initializing and configuring Set up these items: Lab Manager Administrator account Storage servers Network parameters Connection between the Managed Server and Lab Manager Server components Web console Logging on to Lab Manager Check the sample configuration and sample template in the Web console. Addressing NFS media If you add NFS media storage, add the media server storage to the Web console and synchronize Lab Manager Server with the media content. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide VMware, Inc.
Installation Requirements This chapter details VMware recommendations and requirements for your Lab Manager components and network. “General Requirements” on page 14 “System Requirements: Lab Manager Server and Managed Server” on page 15 “Guest Operating System Requirements” on page 17 “Client User Machine Requirements” on page 18 “Storage Requirements” on page 19 “Network Requirements” on page 20 “Using Lab Manager with VirtualCenter Management Server” on page 23 VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide General Requirements Review this general requirement checklist to make sure you have everything you need for the Lab Manager system: One or more Windows Server 2003 machines with the specifications detailed in “System Requirements: Lab Manager Server and Managed Server” on page 15 Windows Server 2003 CD. One or more VMware ESX Server 3.0.1 machines with the specifications detailed in “System Requirements: Lab Manager Server and Managed Server” on page 15. Lab Manager license key to use the Lab Manager license on a single Lab Manager Server. Network errors can occur when different Lab Manager Servers attempt to access the same Managed Server. Lab Manager VMware-labmanager-agent-esx-2.4.0-<build number>.bin to install the Lab Manager Managed Server software. VMware-labmanager-server-2.4.0-<build number>.exe to install the Lab Manager Server software. Networking requirements: IP address information for virtual machines A block of unused IP addresses Gateway Subnet mask DNS server (Optional) Secondary DNS server For more information, see “Network Requirements” on page 20. Guest operating system ISO files. A guest operating system resides on a virtual machine. An ISO file is an image of a CD‐ROM. VMware uses the term “guest OS” to distinguish it from the operating system for the physical server (“host OS”) that the virtual machine runs on.
CPU speed 550MHz minimum 1500MHz minimum (Recommended) 1GHz or faster Memory 512MB minimum 1GB minimum (Recommended) 1GB or (Recommended) 2GB or more more 2GB or more swap space for In general, add 30MB to the total RAM of all virtual machines you expect to run. Hard disk 40GB minimum (Recommended) SAN storage. Lab Manager supports Fiber (Recommended) 200GB or Channel adapters for the SAN. more For details on support for RAID 0 or RAID 5 for software and highest performance hardware‐initiated iSCSI storage, see the VMware Lab Manager Release Notes. 500MB minimum available in the /var partition. 120MB available in the /usr partition. For details on other SAN requirements, see the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation. CD drive CD/DVD drive VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Table 2-1. System Requirements (Continued) System Component Lab Manager Server Managed Server Network (Recommended) Gigabit One or more Ethernet Ethernet controllers: Broadcom NetXtreme 570x Gigabit Machine cannot run on a controllers or Intel PRO/100 Windows domain adapters controller. For best performance and Lab Manager Server resides security, use separate Ethernet outside of a Windows controllers for the ESX service domain. console and virtual machines. Operating system Microsoft Windows Server VMware Infrastructure 3 (ESX 2003. Support for localized Server 3.0.1) versions in U.S. English, ...
Chapter 2 Installation Requirements Guest Operating System Requirements Review the guest operating systems (32‐bit only) on a virtual machine that work with Lab Manager. Specifically, this list covers the guest operating systems that support LM Tools, a key utility in Lab Manager that various features are dependent on. Windows 2003 Server Enterprise and Standard Edition Windows 2003 Server Web Edition or Small Business Server Windows XP Pro with SP2 Windows 2000 Server Windows 2000 Advanced Server Windows 2000 Professional Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS/ES/WS 3.0 X Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS/ES/WS 4.0 X SUSE Linux 9.3 If you do not install LM Tools under certain circumstances (as noted in Chapter 4 of the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide), refer to the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation for information on guest operating systems that do not appear on this list. All 32‐bit guest operating systems covered in the Virtual Infrastructure 3 documentation are functional in Lab Manager. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Client User Machine Requirements Review the requirements for client user machines: Lab Manager client user machines require Internet Explorer (IE) 5.5 or higher and an HTTP connection to a Lab Manager installation. VMware offers experimental support for accessing the Lab Manager Web console with Firefox. Lab Manager client user machines must have routable access to the Lab Manager Server, Managed Server systems, and storage servers. Lab Manager client user machines require 32‐bit processors. These IE browser options (accessible by choosing Internet Options in the Tools menu, and clicking Custom Level in the Security tab) are enabled: Download signed ActiveX controls Run ActiveX controls and plug‐ins Allow META REFRESH Active scripting Allow paste operations via script The Play animations in web pages option in IE (accessible by choosing Internet Options in the Tools menu, and clicking the Advanced tab) is enabled. The Enhanced Internet Explorer Security Configuration option (accessible from the Control Panel by clicking Add or Remove Programs and clicking Add/Remove Windows Components) is disabled only for Windows 2003. System clock is in sync with the Lab Manager Server, storage servers, and Managed Server systems. Display requirements: 1024 x 768 or higher resolution monitor for users without Administrative privileges 1280 x 1024 or higher resolution monitor for Administrators. Networking requirements: IP address information for virtual machines A block of unused IP addresses Gateway Subnet mask VMware, Inc.
Chapter 2 Installation Requirements DNS server Secondary DNS server (optional) Storage Requirements This section covers details of media storage and virtual machine storage (datastore). Media Storage Lab Manager provides a default repository for media on the Lab Manager Server. You can add additional storage servers for media. Review the requirements for media (CD and floppy image) storage: Media storage must support SMB or NFS format. VMware recommends using NFS servers for additional media storage. (SMB only) You cannot have concurrent access to a Windows machine using multiple accounts with different credentials. If you want to have multiple Storage Server shares on one server, use the same account (user name and password) for access. Enter the user name and password for the share when attaching it to Lab Manager. Virtual Machine Storage (Datastore) The datastore is the storage location for virtual machines in ESX Server systems. The setup of the Lab Manager Web console assumes you already set up the datastore in the ESX Server system. (See the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation for steps using the Virtual Infrastructure Client.) The initialization process for Lab Manager (page 38) prompts you to select the VMware Virtual Machine File System (VMFS) devices you want the Managed Server to use for storage. Review the requirements for the datastore: (Recommended) Small number of large SAN VMFS partitions rather than a large number of small partitions. Setup for ESX Server VMFS partitions occurs outside of Lab Manager through the VI Client. This client is an interface packaged with ESX Server that allows users to connect remotely to ESX Server systems from any Windows PC. Use VI Client to add or edit disk volumes and partitions. When you attach the Managed Server in Lab Manager, you can specify the VMFS disk volumes for the Managed Server. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Network Requirements Network requirements and recommendations are covered in these sections: “Configuring Routing” on page 20 “Configuring Domains and Permissions” on page 20 “Configuring Firewall Settings” on page 21 “Gathering Network Information for Installation” on page 22 “IP Addresses for Virtual Machines” on page 22 “Configuring IIS and ASP.NET on a Lab Manager Server” on page 22 Configuring Routing Review the requirements for network connectivity Lab Manager client user machines have routable access to Lab Manager servers. If the Lab Manager servers are behind a firewall and not directly accessible, you can use a virtual private network (VPN). Lab Manager is not compatible with network address translation (NAT). See “Configuring Firewall Settings” on page 21 for more information on configuring network ports for routable access. Lab Manager Server does not need to reside on the same subnet as the Managed Server systems. Lab Manager Server requires a static IP address. Lab Manager Server and the Managed Server systems need access to the media storage but do not need to reside on the same subnet. VMware recommends that you isolate the Lab Manager servers on the same physical switch to facilitate network traffic. Configuring Domains and Permissions Because the Lab Manager Server and Managed Server systems must mount shares, ...
UDP 137, 138 storage files media (SAN) storage Lab Manager Web console TCP 902, client deployed TCP 2049 virtual machines additional media Managed Server storage (NFS) Figure 2-1. Detailed View of Lab Manager Components and Ports During the installation process, ensure that port conflicts do not exist. To determine ports in use, type netstat from the command line. Use the netstat -on command to determine the program identifier (PID) for the application and use Task Manager to find its name. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Gathering Network Information for Installation Before you begin the installation, gather information about your network. This includes the block of IP addresses the Lab Manager System uses for virtual machines, IP addresses for the primary and secondary DNS servers in the network, subnet mask for the network, IP address for the network gateway, and the Lab Manager Server DNS suffix. Consult your network IT Administrator for information. IP Addresses for Virtual Machines Reserve a range of IP addresses for virtual machines. This range is in addition to the IP addresses required for each Lab Manager Server, storage server, and Managed Server. IP addresses for virtual machines are automatically allocated from the pool of IP addresses you reserve. The number of virtual machines running and requiring IP addresses varies with the number and complexity of configurations deployed at any one time. For a minimum system, you probably need at least 100 IP addresses. (You can add blocks of addresses at a later time.) For a large installation, VMware recommends allocating 200 or more IP addresses. You need one or two IP addresses for each deployed virtual machine. Base your estimate on current and future needs. Table 2-2. Essential Network Information IP and Network Component Example IP address block for virtual machines...
Choose Start > Settings > Control Panel > Add or Remove Programs. In the left pane of the Add or Remove Programs dialog box, click the Add/Remove Windows Components icon. In the Windows Components wizard, select the Application Server component. Click Details. Select the ASP.NET and Internet Information Services (IIS) options. Click OK and Next to install the components. To verify you installed ASP.NET version 1.1.4322 Choose Start > Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager. On the left pane, expand the entry for the local computer and select Web Service Extensions. Make sure you can see ASP.NET v1.1.4322 with an Allowed status. If the status is Prohibited, right‐click ASP.NET v1.1.4322 and choose Allow from the menu. For more information, see the Microsoft Web site: http://office.microsoft.com/en‐us/assistance/HA100598511033.aspx Using Lab Manager with VirtualCenter Management Server Before you install and use Lab Manager, be aware that you can use VMware VirtualCenter Management Server (VirtualCenter Server) to monitor ESX Server systems managed by Lab Manager. However, all VirtualCenter Server actions that register or deregister Lab Manager virtual machines (including those triggered by VMware HA and VMware VMotion) break Lab Manager. VMware recommends managing ESX Server systems with Lab Manager or VirtualCenter Server, but not both. For more information on VirtualCenter Server, see the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide VMware, Inc.
Installing Lab Manager After reviewing the requirements in Chapter 2, install the software for the Lab Manager Managed Server and Lab Manager Server. This chapter covers these topics: “Reviewing the Installation Flow” on page 26 “Setting Up Managed Server Systems” on page 27 “Setting Up the Lab Manager Server” on page 31 “Verifying the ASP.NET Version” on page 37 “Initializing and Configuring Lab Manager” on page 38 “Checking the Sample Template and Configuration” on page 40 “Adding and Synchronizing Lab Manager Server with NFS Media Storage” on page 41 “Uninstalling Lab Manager” on page 42 VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Reviewing the Installation Flow The installation process involves these high‐level steps: Step 1 Set up the Managed Server systems. Install the Lab Manager Managed Server software on at least one ESX Server system. You must have access to the Managed Server agent executable (VMware-labmanager-agent-esx-2.4.0-<build number>.bin). See “Setting Up Managed Server Systems” on page 27. Step 2 Set up the Lab Manager Server. After creating at least one Managed Server, create the Lab Manager Server. The Lab Manager Server controls both the back‐end (Managed Server systems) and front‐end (Lab Manager Web console). You must have access to the Lab Manager Server executable (VMware-labmanager-server-2.4.0-<build number>.exe). See “Setting Up the Lab Manager Server” on page 31. Step 3 Initialize and configure Lab Manager.
This section covers these procedures: “Prerequisites for Managed Server Systems” on page 27 “Installing the Managed Server Agent Software on ESX Server” on page 29 Prerequisites for Managed Server Systems In addition to the installation requirements described in Chapter 2, make sure ESX Server is set up properly for a Lab Manager Managed Server, configure the NFS server if you need additional media storage, and review the information on network fencing. Verifying the Setup of the ESX Server System Use the VI Client packaged with ESX Server to review these prerequisites for your target Managed Server: At least one VMFS 3 partition is attached to the Managed Server. In the VI Client, navigate to the Storage Management page to add VMFS disk volumes and partitions. During the process of attaching the Managed Server to the Lab Manager Server, specify the partitions for the Managed Server. ESX Server licensing is enabled to allow Lab Manager to deploy virtual machines. See the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation for details on enabling the license with the VI Client. The host name of the ESX Server machine must map to the IP address of the console NIC. See the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation for details on configuring network parameters for the service console. At least one virtual switch for virtual machines is attached to an active NIC. For details, see the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation. The system clock shows the current date and time. VMware recommends using Network Time Protocol (NTP). VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Configuring Additional Media Storage (NFS) Prior to Installing the Managed Server Before installing the Managed Server, configure the NFS server if you plan on having extra media storage besides the default media storage server on the Lab Manager Server. Configuring an NFS server involves these tasks: Create a /ISO directory (use capital letters) under the exported share. For example, if the NFS server is 10.6.1.2:/export/medialib, the user must create the /export/medialib/ISO directory on the NFS server. Lab Manager requires you to populate the /ISO directory with the media files. Use the VI Client to set up the VMkernel network. You need an IP address specifically for this process. See the VMware Infrastructure 3 documentation for details on the VI Client. To set up the VMkernel network In the Configuration tab of the VI Client, click Networking in the Hardware box. Click the Properties link for the switch associated with the appropriate NIC. Click the Add button. Select the VMkernel option. Enter the required network information. Make sure to enter the correct gateway for the VMkernel. Click Finish.
To install the Managed Server agent software On the target Managed Server, log in as root. Copy VMware-labmanager-agent-esx-2.4.0-<build number>.bin to the target ESX server computer. VMware recommends using the scp utility. If you have a choice of transferring the files in binary or ASCII mode, use binary mode. To verify the integrity of the software, use the md5sum utility on the target ESX Server computer: > md5sum VMware-labmanager-agent-esx-2.4.0-<build number>.bin The correct output is noted on the VMware download site. To run the installer, type: > sh VMware-labmanager-agent-esx-2.4.0-<build number>.bin This command initiates verifications to ensure the ESX Server machine is in an adequate state for the agent installation. Specify your action based on whether you want NFS media storage. The following non-fatal error(s) have been found: - No VMKernel Network found. Virtual Machines on this Managed Server will not be able to use CDROM or Floppy media hosted on Lab Manager's NFS Storage Servers.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide > Password: > Confirm password: This account enables communication between Lab Manager and the Managed Server and also enables access to the consoles of the hosted virtual machines for the Managed Server. Use the same user name and password when adding a Managed Server to Lab Manager in the Lab Manager console. For more information on adding a Managed Server, see the “Administering and Monitoring Lab Manager” chapter of the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide. If you configured two or more virtual switches using the VI Client, select a network switch for virtual machines. VMware, Inc.
Setting Up the Lab Manager Server After installing the Managed Server systems, set up the Lab Manager Server. The Lab Manager Server provides Web and SOAP interfaces to interact with Lab Manager. Note that Lab Manager Server automatically installs an instance of Microsoft SQL Server Desktop Engine (MSDE) for use with Lab Manager. This section covers these topics: “Prerequisites for Lab Manager Server” on page 31 “Security Recommendations” on page 31 “Configuring Internet Explorer on the Lab Manager Server” on page 34 “Installing the Lab Manager Server Software” on page 36 Prerequisites for Lab Manager Server In addition to the installation requirements described in Chapter 2, review these prerequisites for the Lab Manager Server. The target Lab Manager Server must have a NIC with these requirements: Static IP address Physically connected NIC (no wireless cards) You must use a fully qualified domain name (FQDN). Certain features of Lab Manager, such as LiveLink, require an FQDN. This requirement does not mean that the Lab Manager Server system resides in a domain. See “Setting Up a FQDN for the Server” on page 35. The system clock shows the current date and time. Lab Manager Server cannot reside on a machine with Microsoft SQL Server 2005. Make sure your target Lab Manager Server does not already contain a Windows share called “VMwareLM.” Security Recommendations Review the information on SSL certificates and enabling a high security policy. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Installing or Customizing the SSL Certificate VMware recommends installing an SSL certificate from a trusted certification authority that validates the server identity. Generate the SSL certificate with the domain name or IP address for accessing Lab Manager. If you do not install the SSL certificate, VMware automatically generates one but SSL security warnings appear in the browser. For more information, see “Accessing the Lab Manager Console” in the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide. You can use OpenSSL to generate a custom SSL certificate with a different name than the one generated by VMware. To generate a custom SSL certificate using OpenSSL Download and install OpenSSL. Create a file named OpenSSlVMware.cfg in a working directory. Refer to this sample file: # Conf file that vpx uses to generate SSL certificates.
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Chapter 3 Installing Lab Manager openssl pkcs12 -export -out " OpenSslVMware.pfx" -in " OpenSslVMware.crt" -inkey " OpenSslVMware.key" -name OpenSslVMware -passout pass: <password> This process generates a .pfx file. Remove any outdated certificate from IIS and import the new .pfx file into IIS. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Modifying Security Policies If you want to use Lab Manager in a high security environment, you must modify the policy settings. To modify a high security policy On the desktop of the target Lab Manager Server, choose Start > All Programs > Administrative Tools > Local Security Policy. In the left pane, drill down to Security Options under Local Policies. In the right pane, double‐click Microsoft network server: Digitally sign communications (always). Select Disabled. Click OK. In the right pane, double‐click Microsoft network server: Digitally sign communications (if client agrees). Select Disabled. Click OK. In the right pane, double‐click Network Security: Lan Manager authentication level Properties. 10 Select Send NTLM response only. 11 Click OK. Configuring Internet Explorer on the Lab Manager Server Access Lab Manager from your desktop browser or the Microsoft Windows 2003 server. ...
Chapter 3 Installing Lab Manager Setting Up a FQDN for the Server You must use a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) to ensure certain Lab Manager features can work. This requirement does not mean that the Lab Manager Server system resides in a domain. To set up a FQDN for the server On the desktop of the target Lab Manager Server, right‐click My Computer and choose Properties from the menu. On the Computer Name tab, click Change. Click More. Enter the primary DNS suffix of the computer (for example, vmware.com). VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Installing the Lab Manager Server Software Lab Manager Server involves a typical or custom installation. Consider a custom installation if you want to put the storage server on a separate disk because of a heavy storage requirements. To install the Lab Manager Server software On the target Lab Manager Server, launch VMware-labmanager-server-2.4.0-<build number>.exe. Review the Welcome page of the installation wizard. Specify whether you want a Typical or Custom installation. A custom installation enables these actions: Changing the program files directory. Changing the data directory (Lab Manager Repository location or \VMwareLM). The Repository directory is the local server for media storage that also holds certain virtual machine images required for Lab Manager Server. These images can have a size in the gigabytes range. After installing the product, you can add more storage servers. Select the IP address for Lab Manager traffic. This page appears only if you have more than one active NIC with static IP addresses. Click Install. During the MSDE installation, the actual time to complete this process is longer than the estimated time displayed in a message. VMware, Inc.
Chapter 3 Installing Lab Manager Verifying the ASP.NET Version After installing the Lab Manager Server, verify that the Lab Manager Web application uses the correct version of ASP.NET. To verify the ASP.NET version Choose Start > Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager. Choose Web Sites > Default Web Site > LabManager. Right‐click LabManager and choose Properties from the menu. In the Virtual Directory tab, click the Configuration button. For the .asax, .ascx, .asmx, and .aspx extensions, look at the executable path for each extension and ensure the version is 1.1.4322. If you had to change the version, open a command‐line prompt and use the iisreset command. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Initializing and Configuring Lab Manager After installing the Lab Manager Server, initialize and configure the Lab Manager system by accessing it from a Web browser. You can perform this task on the server console or your desktop. The initialization process involves the Administrator account, licensing, storage servers, network parameters for new virtual machines created in Lab Manager, attachment of a Managed Server, and support setup. Lab Manager sends the customer ID to VMware at the beginning and the end of the initialization wizard. To initialize and configure Lab Manager From any machine with network access to the Lab Manager Server, launch Internet Explorer and go to http://<Lab Manager Server IP address or name> You can also launch the same page from the desktop by double‐clicking the VMware Lab Manager icon. If you receive SSL warnings, see “Accessing the Lab Manager Console” in the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide. In the Web Initialization wizard, select the location where the installation process is taking place. Accept the license agreement. Browse and select the file with the license key. The wizard presents information on storage servers, network parameters for virtual machines created in Lab Manager, and Managed Server systems. Note that the default server for media storage (\\<Lab Manager Server IP address>\VMwareLM) resides on the Lab Manager Server hard disk. Specify the details for the network environment: Specify the IP range and related information.
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Chapter 3 Installing Lab Manager Attach one of the Managed Server systems you created to the Lab Manager Server: Type a display name and description (optional) for the Managed Server. If this machine is your Managed Server, default entries appear in the fields. Type the IP Address for the Managed Server. If this machine is your Managed Server, its IP address automatically appears in the field. Type the user name and password of an account with Administrator privileges for the machine you are attaching to the Lab Manager Server. Select the VMFS devices you want this Managed Server to use for storage. This step assumes you set up your SAN using the VI Client for ESX Server (see “Virtual Machine Storage (Datastore)” on page 19). Do not select partitions used in production elsewhere. If you are not putting this Managed Server into production right away, you do not have to select any devices. Create the first Lab Manager Administrator account with a user name, password, and email address. Lab Manager passwords require at least six characters. Choose whether to enable SupportLink, a feature that sends usage data to VMware and improves product support. If you are outside of the U.S. and enabling SupportLink, you must consent to the possible transfer of data outside of the country where the installation takes place. 10 Before exiting the wizard, review some optional configuration tasks after logging in to the Web console: Create user accounts. Configure systems for LDAP authentication. Lab Manager has a repository of users and can autoimport a list of users from an LDAP server. Lab Manager imports LDAP users as standard users by default without administrative privileges. Create or import machine templates. See the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide for details on various operations. 11 Type the user name and password of the Lab Manager Administrator account you created to log in to the Lab Manager console. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Checking the Sample Template and Configuration After logging in to the Lab Manager console, view a sample template and configuration in the Lab Manager console. For details on templates and configurations, see the VMware Lab Manager User’s Guide. To check the sample template and configuration In the left pane, click Workspace to see the Sample 1 configuration. In the left pane, click Templates to see the ttylinux‐4‐ESX3(<owner>) sample configuration. Be aware that the first time you deploy a template or configuration to view a virtual machine console, you must follow the instructions to install the ActiveX control. Figure 3-1. Warning for ActiveX Installation in Virtual Machine Console After the ActiveX installation, you can log in to the virtual machine console of the sample template or configuration as root and use the “lab manager” password. VMware, Inc.
To add a media server In the left pane, click Storage. Click the Add Server button. Enter the required information, select NFS Storage, and enter the NFS export path (for example, <host name or IP address:>/export). Create a ISO subdirectory on the NFS server. If your NFS server is <host name or IP address:>/export, the ISO directory is <host name or IP address:>/export/ISO. To synchronize Lab Manager Server with NFS media storage In the left pane, click Storage. In the left pane, click Media. Click Synchronize to make Lab Manager recognize the contents of the NFS server. Confirm to synchronize the contents. Lab Manager does not provide a way to populate the contents of the NFS server contents as it does for SMB shares. Use your own method of populating the NFS server. If you add new items, use the Synchronize button to ensure Lab Manager recognizes the additional items. VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Uninstalling Lab Manager Uninstalling Lab Manager involves uninstalling the Managed Server agent and the Lab Manager Server software. Uninstalling Managed Server Agent Software If required, you can remove the Managed Server agent software. To uninstall Managed Server Agent software Use the Lab Manager Web console to undeploy all virtual machines that reside on the Managed Server. (In the Templates and Workspace pages, move the pointer over the name of the template or configuration and choose Undeploy from the menu.) Log on as root. ssh to the ESX Server machine and type: > uninstall-agent.sh Uninstalling Lab Manager Server If required, you can remove the Lab Manager Server software. To uninstall the Lab Manager Server software If you need to uninstall all of the Lab Manager Server software, use the Lab ...
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Chapter 3 Installing Lab Manager Agree to reset Lab Manager Services and IIS. Click Finish. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide VMware, Inc.
Troubleshooting the Installation This appendix covers these troubleshooting topics for the Lab Manager installation: “Error 1720: Windows Installer Package” on page 46 “Microsoft SQL Desktop Engine (MSDE) Installation Fails” on page 46 “Transfer of Managed Server Agent Software to ESX Server Machine Fails” on page 47 “Error 1603: Required Services for Installing Lab Manager” on page 47 VMware, Inc.
VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide Error 1720: Windows Installer Package Problem During the installation of Lab Manager Server, you see error 1720: Error 1720. There is a problem with the Windows Installer package. A script required for the install to complete could not be run Solution The message indicates a permissions problem in a Visual Basic (VB) script. Make sure you logged in with Administrator privileges. If you already logged in with the correct privileges, contact VMware support. Open the Event Viewer and read the message about the Visual Basic failure.
Skipping to next header tar: Archive contains obsolescent base-64 headers tar: Error exit delayed from previous errors running installer Solution The message indicates possible corruption of the file. Before installing the Managed Server software, transfer the file to the ESX Server machine using FTP in binary mode. For more information on using binary mode and verifying the integrity of the software, see the steps in “Installing the Managed Server Agent Software on ESX Server” on page 29. Error 1603: Required Services for Installing Lab Manager Problem During the installation of Lab Manager Server, error 1603 appears. Solution Make sure the IIS Admin, World Wide Web Publishing, and HTTP SSL services are running. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide VMware, Inc.
FQDN 35 synchronizing with NFS media storage 41 guest operating systems system requirements 15 requirements 17 verifying ASP.NET versions 37 Managed Server configuring 22 configuring NFS media storage 28 installation defining 10 flow 26 VMware, Inc. VMware, Inc.
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VMware® Lab Manager Installation Guide installing the agent software 29 prerequisites 27 user groups setting up 27 accessing 6 system requirements 15 virtual machine consoles network installing ActiveX. 40 configuring domains and VMkernel network permissions 20 setting up 28 configuring firewall settings 21...
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