VMware VSphere 6.5: Install, Configure & Manage

Install, Configure and Manage VMware vSphere 6.5 effectively

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

VMware VSphere 6.5: Install, Configure & Manage is a five-day course that focuses on installing, configuring and managing VMware vSphere 6.5. It includes VMware ESXi 6.5, VMware vCenter Server 6.5 and more. During the course, our instructor will guide the delegates on how to administer an infrastructure of vSphere for an organisation. In the software-defined data centre, it acts as the strong foundation for other VMware technologies.

  • Learn how to deploy an ESXi Host and VMware vCenter server applications

  • Get trained from our highly certified and experienced instructors

  • Learn how to define the software-defined data centre

  • Use vCenter Server for managing ESXi host

WHAT'S INCLUDED ?

Find out what's included in the training programme.

Includes

Tutor Support

A dedicated tutor will be at your disposal throughout the training to guide you through any issues.

Includes

Certificate

Delegates will get certification of completion at the end of the course.

PREREQUISITES

For attending VMware VSphere 6.5: Install, Configure & Manage course, the delegates should have an experience of the system administrator.

TARGET AUDIENCE

VMware VSphere 6.5: Install, Configure & Manage course is ideal for the following:

  • System Administrators
  • System Engineers

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

Upon successful completion of the course, the delegates will be able to:

  • Define the software-defined data centre
  • Monitor and manage resource usage and pools
  • Explore various components of vSphere and their function in the infrastructure
  • Configure vSphere HA
  • Understand the features and functions of Fibre channel and VMware vSAN

Enquire Program

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

MSP Training introduces VMware VSphere 6.5 course that provides the delegates with the knowledge and skills required to design and deploy VMware VSphere 6.5 virtual infrastructure successfully. The course includes vSphere and the Software-Defined Data Center, Overview of Virtual Machines, vCenter Server, Configure and Manage Virtual Networks, Virtual Machine Management,        vSphere HA, vSphere Fault Tolerance, Protecting Data and many more.


PROGRAM CONTENT

Introduction to Course

  • Introductions and course logistics
  • Objectives of the Course
  • Advantages of the VMware Education Learning Zone
  • Get a complete picture of the VMware certification system
  • Identification of additional resources

vSphere and the Software-Defined Data Center

  • The topology of a physical data centre
  • Files and components of virtual machines
  • Benefits of using virtual machines
  • vSphere virtual infrastructure
  • Similarities and dissimilarities between physical architectures and virtual architectures
  • Purpose of ESXi and vCenter Server
  • Software-defined data centre
  • Private, public, and hybrid clouds

Overview of Virtual Machines

  • Introduction to virtual machines, virtual machine hardware, and virtual machine files
  • Importance of VMware Tools™
  • PCI pass-through, Direct I/O, remote direct memory access, and NVMe
  • Deploy and configure virtual machines and templates
  • Identify the files that make up a virtual machine
  • Latest virtual machine hardware and its features
  • Virtual machine CPU, memory, disk, and network resource usage
  • Identify the format of virtual machine disk

Introduction to vCenter Server

  • The architecture of vCenter Server
  • Deploy and configure vCenter Server Appliance
  • Use vSphere Web Client
  • Backup and restore vCenter Server
  • Examine vCenter Server permissions and roles
  • Explain the vSphere HA architectures and features
  • Access and navigate the new vSphere clients
  • Examine the new vSphere authentication proxy
  • Manage vCenter Server inventory objects and licenses

Configure and Manage Virtual Networks

  • Describe, create, and manage standard switches
  • Configure virtual switch security and load-balancing policies
  • Compare and Contrast vSphere distributed switches and standard switches
  • Types of virtual switch connection
  • Describe the architecture of new TCP/IP stack
  • Use VLANs with standard switches

Configure and Manage Virtual Storage

  • Overview of the types of storage protocols and storage device
  • ESXi hosts using iSCSI, NFS, and Fibre Channel storage
  • Create and manage VMFS and NFS datastores
  • Latest features of VMFS 6.5
  • vSAN
  • Define guest file encryption

Introduction to Virtual Machine Management

  • Deploy new virtual machines by using templates and cloning
  • Modification and Management of virtual machines
  • Clone a virtual machine
  • Upgrade virtual machine hardware to version 12
  • Remove virtual machines from the vCenter Server inventory and datastore
  • Customise a new virtual machine using customization specification files
  • Perform vSphere vMotion and vSphere Storage vMotion migrations
  • Create and manage virtual machine snapshots
  • Create, clone, and export vApps
  • Introduction to the types of content libraries and how to deploy and use them

Resource Management and Monitoring

  • Virtual CPU and memory
  • Techniques of virtual memory reclamation
  • Describe virtual machine over commitment and resource competition
  • Configure and manage resource pools
  • Describe methods for optimizing CPU and memory usage
  • Use various tools for monitor resource usage
  • Describe and deploy resource pools
  • Set reservations, limits, and shares
  • Define expandable reservations
  • Schedule changes to resource settings
  • Create, clone, and export vApps

Introduction to vSphere HA, vSphere Fault Tolerance, and Protecting Data

  • Explain the vSphere HA architecture
  • Configure and manage a vSphere HA cluster
  • Use vSphere HA advanced parameters
  • Define clusterwide restart ordering capabilities
  • Enforce infrastructural or intra-app dependencies during failover
  • Define vSphere HA heartbeat networks and datastore heartbeats
  • vSphere Fault Tolerance
  • Enable vSphere Fault Tolerance on virtual machines
  • Support vSphere Fault Tolerance interoperability with vSAN
  • Examine enhanced consolidation of vSphere Fault Tolerance virtual machines
  • Introduce vSphere Replication
  • Use vSphere Data Protection to back up and restore data

Overview of vSphere DRS

  • Define the functions and benefits of a vSphere DRS cluster
  • Configure and manage a vSphere DRS cluster
  • Work with affinity and anti-affinity rules
  • Define the new capabilities for what-if analysis and proactive vSphere DRS
  • Highlight the evolution of vSphere DRS using predictive data from VMware vRealize® Operations Manager™
  • Perform pre-emptive actions to prepare for CPU or memory changes
  • Define the vCenter Server embedded vSphere Update Manager, VMware vSphere® ESXi™ Image Builder CLI, and VMware vSphere® Auto Deploy capabilities
  • Use vSphere HA and vSphere DRS together for business continuity

vSphere Update Manager

  • New vSphere Update Manager architecture, components, and capabilities
  • Use vSphere Update Manager to manage ESXi, virtual machine, and vApp patching
  • Install vSphere Update Manager and the vSphere Update Manager plug-in
  • Create patch baselines
  • Use host profiles to manage host configuration compliance
  • Scan and remediate hosts

VMware VSphere 6.5: Install, Configure & Manage Enquiry

 

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ABOUT Poole

Poole is a large coastal town lies on the southern shore of England with a population of around 147,645 according to 2001 census. It is a seaport in the county of Dorset located about 33 kilometres east of Dorchester. In 1997, the town granted a unitary authority and Borough of Poole administers the local council. Poole along with the towns of Christchurch and Bournemouth, it forms the part of Poole-Bournemouth urban area or South Dorset conurbation. It is the second largest town in Dorset. The early history of the town found back before the Iron Age. The town developed as an important port in the 12th century, and the wealth of the town grew with the introduction of the wool trade. The town made strong trade links with the North America. It became one of the busiest ports in the United Kingdom in the 18th century.

During the Second World War, the town served as the main departing point for Normandy landings, also known as Operation Neptune where landing operations of the Allied invasion of Normandy took place on D-Day. The town is considered as an attractive tourist destination and famous for its large natural Harbour, Blue Flag beaches and the Lighthouse arts centre. With passenger ferry and English Channel freight services, the town became an important commercial port of the country. Poole is home to Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) and Royal Marines.

History

The name of the town is developed from the English word pool meaning a place near a creek or stream of water. It has been suggested that the area around the Poole has been occupied from the last 2500 years. The Romans took over the settlement of Iron Age during the invasion of Britain in the first century. The town became an essential part of the Kingdom of Wessex during the Anglo-Saxons period, inhabited Great Britain in the 5th century. The town was used as a fishing and Harbour base, where ships main stayed on their passage to the River Frome. The town was considered as an important Anglo-Saxon town of Wareham, English county of Dorset. In 876, the town faced two major large-scale raids by Vikings and Canute also used the port of the town to raid and pillage Wessex.

The importance of Wareham declined, and the town grew rapidly as a busy port after the Norman occupation of England.  The Great Charter of Elizabeth I granted a county corporate, and subsequently, the town got legal independence from Dorset. The Newfoundland fisheries and North American colonies established a successful commerce with the town in the 16th century. The town experienced the most prosperous period from the early 18th century till early 19th century. The prosperous phase brought new developments including the replacement of medieval buildings with the terraced housing and Georgian mansions. The end of the Napoleonic Wars ended the Newfoundland trade, and most merchants ceased trading. During the industrialisation, the town grew rapidly and became a place for mercantile prosperity. The port of the town lost business as ships became too large for the shallow Harbour in the 19th century. The coastal shipping trade ended with the arrival of railways in 1847.

Economy

The economy of Poole is more balanced as compared to the rest towns of Dorset. The manufacturing sector flourished in 1960, whereas service sector including the relocation of the office-based employers expanded between the 1980 and 1990. The town is home to the world’s largest motor yachts builder Sunseeker and engaged more than 1800 workforce in the shipyards of the town. Other major employers in the town include Lush, Ryvita, Faerch Plast, Siemens and Kerry Foods. The economy of the town is based mainly on the service sector. Major employers in the service sector include Barclays Bank, Bank of New York Mellon, Arts University Bournemouth, Merlin Entertainments and American Express Bank.