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Ansible playbooks for automated deployment and configuration of a nested vSphere environment with NSX-T

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 _____ ______ ______  _____       _             _               ______
/  ___||  _  \|  _  \/  __ \     | |           | |             |___  /         Developed By
\ `--. | | | || | | || /  \/     | |      __ _ | |__    __   __   / /   --------------------------
 `--. \| | | || | | || |         | |     / _` || '_ \   \ \ / /  / /    Rutger Blom  &  Luis Chanu
/\__/ /| |/ / | |/ / | \__/\  _  | |____| (_| || |_) |   \ V / ./ /     NSX vExpert     VCDX #246 
\____/ |___/  |___/   \____/ (_) \_____/ \__,_||_.__/     \_/  \_/ 

Table of Contents

Description

This repository contains Ansible scripts that perform fully automated deployments of complete nested VMware SDDC Pods. The primary use case is consistent and speedy provisioning of nested VMware SDDC lab environments.

Each Pod by default contains:

  • A VyOS Router
  • vCenter Server
  • ESXi Hosts
  • vSAN Storage
  • NSX-T Local Manager
  • NSX-T Edge Nodes
  • Aria Operations for Logs

Additional products and solutions can be enabled for automated deployment and configuration within a Pod:

  • A DNS/NTP Server (multi-Pod)
  • NSX Advanced Load Balancer
  • Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service
  • NSX-T Federation

Physicaloverview

Requirements

The following are the requirements for successful Pod deployments:

  • A physical ESXi host running version 6.7 or higher.
  • A virtual machine with a modern version of Ubuntu (used as the Ansible controller)
  • The default deployment settings require DNS name resolution. You can leverage an existing DNS server, but it must be configured with the required forward and reverse zones and support dynamic updates.
  • Access to VMware product installation media.
  • For deploying NSX-T you will need an NSX-T license (Check out VMUG Advantage or the NSX-T Product Evaluation Center).
  • If IPv6 deployment is enabled (Deploy.Setting.IPv6 = True):
    • Pod.BaseNetwork.IPv6 must be a fully expanded /56 IPv6 network prefix. By default, RFC4193 ULA fd00::/56 prefix is used as a placeholder.
    • Router Version should be set to "Latest" (default)
    • It is recommended that the physical layer-3 switch be configured with OSPFv3 enabled on the Lab-Routers segment
    • The Ansible controller must be IPv6 enabled, and have IPv6 transit to the DNS server
    • DNS server must be IPv6 enabled
    • DNS server must have IPv6 forward and reverse zones
    • Within each Pod, only the following components are currently configured with IPv6:
      • Nested VyOS Router (All interfaces)
      • NSX-T Segments
      • NSX-T eBGP Peering with the Router

Recommendations

The following are recommendations based on our experience with deploying Pods:

  • Use a physical layer-3 switch with appropriate OSPF/BGP configuration matching the OSPF/BGP settings in your config.yml file. Dynamic routing between your Pods and your physical network will make for a better experience.
  • Hardware configuration of the physical ESXi host(s):
    • 2 CPUs (10 cores per CPU)
    • 320 GB RAM
    • 1 TB storage capacity (preferably SSD). Either DAS or 10 Gbit NFS/iSCSI. More space required if multiple labs are deployed.
  • Virtual hardware configuration of the Ansible controller VM:
    • 1 vCPU (4 vCPUs recommended)
    • 8 GB RAM (16GB RAM recommended)
    • Hard disk
      • 64 GB for Linux boot disk
      • 300 GB for /Software repository (Recommend this be on it's own disk)
    • VMware Paravirtual SCSI controller
    • VMXNET3 network adapter
  • Deploy the pre-configured DNS server for DNS name resolution within Pods instead of using your own.

Preparations

  • Configure your physical network:

    • Create an Lab-Routers VLAN used as transit segment between your layer-3 switch and the Pod VyOS router.
    • Configure routing (OSPFv2/OSPFv3/BGP/static) on the Lab-Routers segment.
    • Add the Pod VLANs to your layer-3 switch in case you are deploying the Pod to a vSphere cluster.
  • Install the required software on your Ansible controller:

    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install python3 python3-pip python-is-python3 xorriso p7zip-full git
    git clone https://github.com/rutgerblom/SDDC.Lab.git ~/git/SDDC.Lab
    pip3 install --upgrade -r ~/git/SDDC.Lab/pip3_requirements.txt
    
  • Update your PATH environment variable:

    source ~/.profile
    
  • Install Ansible collections on your Ansible controller:

    ansible-galaxy collection install --upgrade -r ~/git/SDDC.Lab/requirements.yml
    
  • Copy/rename the sample files:

    cp ~/git/SDDC.Lab/config_sample.yml ~/git/SDDC.Lab/config.yml
    cp ~/git/SDDC.Lab/licenses_sample.yml ~/git/SDDC.Lab/licenses.yml
    cp ~/git/SDDC.Lab/software_sample.yml ~/git/SDDC.Lab/software.yml
    cp ~/git/SDDC.Lab/templates_sample.yml ~/git/SDDC.Lab/templates.yml
    
  • Modify config.yml and licenses.yml files according to your needs and your environment

  • Create the Software Library directory structure and set folder permissions using:

    ansible-playbook --ask-become-pass ~/git/SDDC.Lab/utils/Util_CreateSoftwareDir.yml
    

    NOTE: The above command will prompt you for the 'root' password. This is needed as the playbook needs to obtain elevated permissions to create the directory tree and change file system permissions within the Software directory.

  • Add installation media to the corresponding directories in the Software Library (/Software)

Upgrade Considerations

Consider the following when upgrading SDDC.Lab to a newer version.

  • v2 to v3

    • Clone the v3 branch to its own directory. For example: git clone https://github.com/rutgerblom/SDDC.Lab.git ~/git/SDDC.Lab_v3
    • As additional PIP and Ansible modules are required by v3, please follow the instructions in the "Preparations" section to ensure all of the required software is installed on the Ansible controller.
    • Use copies of the v3 sample files and update these with your settings. Don't copy any v2 files into the v3 directory.
    • Remove the VyOS ISO file from your software library and let the router deployment script download the latest version of the rolling release.
  • v3 to v4

    • The "SDDC Labs" folder has been renamed to "SDDC Pods" within the config_sample.yml configuration file. It's suggested that you renamed your folder and update this as part of updating your configuration files for v4.
  • v4 to v5

    • Use of sudo is no longer required to deploy Pods.

    • With the removal of using sudo in executing Ansbile playbooks, the utils/Util_CreateSoftwareDir.yml utility has been changed to leverage the --ask-become-pass option, and thus will prompt for the root password when executed.

    • Additional modules have been added, and are required in order for SDDC.Lab to work. For this reason, please follow the steps outlined in the Preparations section to update your Ansile environment.

    • There have been MANY changes to the config_sample.yml file. Please make sure you update your config.yml files. Once you update your config.yml file(s), be sure to run playbooks/CreatePodConfig.yml against them to rebuild the static configuration files in your home directory.

    • The VyOS router configuration that is generated in v5 has changed from v4 due to various changes VyOS has made since v4 was originally published. For that reason, you need to rename (or delete) the following file: /Software/VyOS/Router/Latest/vyos-rolling-latest.iso. During your next Pod deployment, SDDC.Lab will see that you no longer have a VyOS ISO image in the software repository, and will automatically download the latest rolling nightly build for you.

    • The default value for Target.TempFolder has changed from /tmp/Pod-### to ~/SDDC.Lab/Pod-###. This assumes the SiteCode variable is left at the default value of Pod-###.

    • If you look closely at the Install the required software on your Ansible controller section of Preparations, you'll notice that our instructions now clone the SDDC.Lab repository to ~/git/SDDC.Lab. We suggest you use the same location.

    • Ansible-lint has been run against the SDDC.Lab project files. As part of this effort, and our desire to be compliant with Ansible-lint rules, playbooks and templates have been renamed. If you have scripts to run certain SDDC.Lab playbooks, you may need to update your scripts.

    • IP Address Assignments have changed from previous versions. Please take a moment to become familiar with the updated IP Address Assignments.

    • Please review the Project Features section, as many entries have been updated with additional functionality introduced in this release. In particular:

      1. Additional functionaly was added to vSphere Content Libraries. Not only are multiple Content Libraries now supported, but you can now also subscribe to Internet-based content libraries (i.e. TKG).
      2. Overlay Segments now support automatic IP subnet address assignment for both IPv4 and IPv6. For more information, see NSX-T Segment IP Subnet Auto-Allocation.

Networking

The network configuration is where many users experience issues with the setup of the SDDC.Lab solution. For that reason, the focus of this section is to give a deep dive into how the SDDC.Lab solution "connects" to the physical network, and what networking components it requires. We will also give overviews of how the network connectivity is different if you're running:

  • 1 Physical Server
  • 2 Physical Servers
  • 3 (or more) Physical Servers

Logical Networking Overview

Before we dive into the physical network environment, it's important to understand logically how everything is configured and connected. This is the KEY to understanding how SDDC.Lab works from a networking perspective.

Each SDDC.Lab that is deployed is referred to as a Pod. Every Pod is assigned a number between 10-240 which is evenly divisble by 10. So, valid Pod numbers include 10, 20, 30, ..., 220, 230, and 240. The Pod number drives ALL networking elements used by that lab, including, VLAN IDs, IP networks (IPv4 and IPv6), and Autonomous System Numbers (ASNx). This ensures that no duplicate networking components exist between any of the Pods.

At the heart of each Pod is a software-based VyOS router, which we call the Pod-Router. The Pod-Router provides these main functions:

  1. Connectivity to the physical environment
  2. The gateway interfaces for the various SDDC.Lab networks

Connectivity to the physical environment is achieved via the Pod-Router's eth0 interface. This interface is a an untagged interface, and is connected to the "Lab-Routers" portgroup (discussed later). It's over this interface that the Pod-Router peers with other deployed Pods and the physical environment.

The Pod-Router provides gateway services for all of the SDDC.Lab's networks via it's eth1 interface. Eth1 is configured as a tagged interface, and a unique layer-3 sub-interface (VyOS calls them vif's) is created for each of the SDDC.Lab networks. These sub-interfaces act as the IPv4/IPv6 gateway for its respective SDDC.Lab network.

Each Pod is comprised of ten (10) SDDC.Lab networks, numbered 0 through 9. These SDDC.Lab network numbers are added to the Pod number to create unique VLAN IDs for each Pod. This explains why the Pod Numbers are divisible by 10. Below are the SDDC.Lab networks that are deployed within each Pod (Pod Number 100 shown):

Pod Number Network Number MTU VLAN ID Description
100 0 1500 100 Management (ESXi, NSX-T Edges, etc.)
100 1 9000 101 vMotion
100 2 9000 102 vSAN
100 3 9000 103 IPStorage
100 4 9000 104 Overlay Transport (i.e. GENEVE Traffic)
100 5 1500 105 Service VM Management Interfaces
100 6 1500 106 NSX-T Edge Uplink #1
100 7 1500 107 NSX-T Edge Uplink #2
100 8 1500 108 Remote Tunnel Endpoint (RTEP)
100 9 1500 109 VM Network

In order to be able to deploy multiple Pods, VLAN ID's 10-249 should be reserved for SDDC.Lab use.

Here is a network diagram showing the Pod Logical Networking described above: PodLogicalNetworkingOverview

Physical Networking Overview

When we refer to physical networking, we are referring to the "NetLab-L3-Switch" in the network diagram shown above, along with the "Lab-Routers" portgroup to which it connects. The "Lab-Routers" portgroup is the central "meet-me" network segment which all Pods connect to. It's here where the various Pods establish OSPFv2, OSPFv3, and BGP neighbor peerings and share routes. Because OSPF uses multicast to discover neighbors, there is no additional configuration required for it. BGP on the other hand, by default, is only configured to peer with the "NetLab-L3-Switch". This behavior can be changed by adding additional neighbors to the Pod Configuration file, but that is left up to the user to setup. The routing protocols configured on the "NetLab-L3-Switch" should be configured to originate and advertise the default route to the VyOS routers on the "Lab-Routers" segment.

To ensure VLAN IDs created on the "NetLab-L3-Switch" do not pollute other networking environments, and to protect the production network from the SDDC.Lab environment, it's HIGHLY recommended that the following guidelines are followed:

  1. The VLAN IDs used by the SDDC.Lab environment (i.e. VLANs 10-249) should not be stretched to other switches outside of the SDDC.Lab environment. Those VLANs should be local to the SDDC.Lab.
  2. The uplink from the "NetLab-L3-Switch" to the core network should be a ROUTED connection.
  3. Reachability between the SDDC.Lab environment and the Core Network should be via static routes, and NOT use any dynamic routing protocol. This will ensure that SDDC.Lab routes don't accidentally "leak" into the production network.

All interfaces, both virtual and physical, that are connected to the "Lab-Routers" segment should be configured with a 1500 byte MTU. This ensures that OSPF neighbors can properly establish peering relationships. That said, the "NetLab-L3-Switch" must be configured to support jumbo mtu frames, as multiple SDDC.Lab segments require jumbo frame support. Jumbo frame size of 9000 (or higher) is suggested.

Physical Network Considerations - One ESXi Server

When only one physical ESXi server is being used to run Pod workloads, as all workloads will be running on the same vSwitch on that host, there is no requirement to configure an Uplink on the SDDCLab_vDS switch to the physical environment.

Physical Network Considerations - Two ESXi Servers

When exactly two physical ESXi servers are being used to run Pod workloads, you can use a cross-over cable to connect the SDDCLab_vDS vswitches together via their Uplinks. This cable between the two servers to connect the SDDCLab_vDS Uplink interface from each server.

Physical Network Considerations - Three or more ESXi Servers

When three or more physical ESXi servers are being used to run Pod workloads, you have two options:

  1. Use a single "NetLab-L3-Switch" and connect all servers to it (Suggested)
  2. If the number of available ports on the "NetLab-L3-Switch" is limited, you can use two switches as is shown in the Pod Logical Networking Overview above. In this configuration, a layer-2 only switch is used for the SDDCLab_vDS vswitch, and a layer-3 switch is used to connect to the "Lab-Routers" segment.

IP Address Assignments

Underlay Network

When a Pod is deployed, various components are deployed as part of that Pod. Each of those components are connected to the Pod's Management subnet. Here is a listing of those components along with their respective host IP address:

IPv4 Address Component Description DNS Name Part of Default Deployment
1 Gateway VyOS Router Pod-240-Router Yes
2 Reserved Reserved for Future Use
3 Reserved Reserved for Future Use
4 Reserved Reserved for Future Use
5 vCenter Server vCenter Server Appliance Pod-240-vCenter Yes
6 Reserved Reserved for Future Use
7 GM VIP NSX-T Global Manager VIP Pod-240-NSXT-GM Only if deploying NSX-T Federation
8 GM-1 NSX-T Global Manager Node 1 Pod-240-NSXT-GM-1 Only if deploying NSX-T Federation
9 GM-2 NSX-T Global Manager Node 2 Pod-240-NSXT-GM-2 No
10 GM-3 NSX-T Global Manager Node 3 Pod-240-NSXT-GM-3 No
11 LM VIP NSX-T Local Manager VIP Pod-240-NSXT-LM Yes
12 LM-1 NSX-T Local Manager Node 1 Pod-240-NSXT-LM-1 Yes
13 LM-2 NSX-T Local Manager Node 2 Pod-240-NSXT-LM-2 No
14 LM-3 NSX-T Local Manager Node 3 Pod-240-NSXT-LM-3 No
15 ALB VIP NSX-T Advanced Load Balancer (ALB) Controller VIP Pod-240-ALB-Controller No
16 ALB Controller-1 NSX Advanced Load Balancer (ALB) Controller 1 Pod-240-ALB-Controller-1 No
17 ALB Controller-2 NSX Advanced Load Balancer (ALB) Controller 2 Pod-240-ALB-Controller-2 No
18 ALB Controller-3 NSX Advanced Load Balancer (ALB) Controller 3 Pod-240-ALB-Controller-3 No
19 vRLI VIP Aria Operations for Logs Cluster VIP Pod-240-vRLI Yes
20 vRLI-1 Aria Operations for Logs Appliance Node 1 Pod-240-vRLI-1 Yes
21 vRLI-2 Aria Operations for Logs Appliance Node 2 Pod-240-vRLI-2 No
22 vRLI-3 Aria Operations for Logs Appliance Node 3 Pod-240-vRLI-3 No
23 vRNI Platform vRealize Network Insight Platform Appliance Pod-240-vRNI No
24 vRNI Collector vRealize Network Insight Collector Node Pod-240-vRNI-Collector No
25 Replication Appliance vSphere Replication Appliance Pod-240-Replication No
Thru 100 Reserved Reserved for Future Management VMs/Services
101 Mgmt-1 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Management Cluster Pod-240-Mgmt-1 No
102 Mgmt-2 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Management Cluster Pod-240-Mgmt-2 No
103 Mgmt-3 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Management Cluster Pod-240-Mgmt-3 No
104-109 Mgmt-X Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Management Cluster Pod-240-Mgmt-X No
111 ComputeA-1 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeA Cluster Pod-240-ComputeA-1 Yes
112 ComputeA-2 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeA Cluster Pod-240-ComputeA-2 Yes
113 ComputeA-3 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeA Cluster Pod-240-ComputeA-3 Yes
114-119 ComputeA-X Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeA Cluster Pod-240-ComputeA-X No
121 ComputeB-1 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeB Cluster Pod-240-ComputeB-1 No
122 ComputeB-2 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeB Cluster Pod-240-ComputeB-2 No
123 ComputeB-3 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeB Cluster Pod-240-ComputeB-3 No
124-129 ComputeB-X Nested ESXi Host in vSphere ComputeB Cluster Pod-240-ComputeB-X No
131-139 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
141-149 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
151-159 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
161-169 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
171-179 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
181-189 Reserved Future vSphere Cluster
191 Edge-1 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Edge Cluster Pod-240-Edge-1 Yes
192 Edge-2 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Edge Cluster Pod-240-Edge-1 Yes
193 Edge-3 Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Edge Cluster Pod-240-Edge-1 Yes
194-199 Edge-X Nested ESXi Host in vSphere Edge Cluster Pod-240-Edge-X No
201-205 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (Management) No
206-210 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeA) No
211-215 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeB) No
216-220 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeW) No
221-225 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeX) No
226-230 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeY) No
231-235 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (ComputeZ) No
236-240 Reserved Tanzu Supervisor Cluster Control Plane (Edge) No
241 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
242 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
243 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
244 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
245 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
246 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
247 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
248 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
249 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
250 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
251 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
252 Reserved NSX-T Edge Transport Node No
253 EdgeVM-02 NSX-T Tier-0 Edge Transport Node 2 Pod-240-T0-EdgeVM-02 Yes
254 EdgeVM-01 NSX-T Tier-0 Edge Transport Node 1 Pod-240-T0-EdgeVM-01 Yes

Overlay Network

When a Pod is deployed, the IP space for the NSX overlay is derived from the settings located under Pod.BaseOverlay in the Pod configuration file.

SDDC.Lab Default Credentials

To expedite and simplify the login process to the various products within a Pod, we have put together a CSV file with all the default credentials for each of the products supported. The CSV file can be used to populate the "memorized" username/password fields, and are browser specific.

Mozilla Firefox

By default, the importing of passwords into Firefox is disabled, so you must enable this functionality before Firefox will present you with an Import from file... option. Detailed instructions on how to enable this functionality can be found in this blog post by Wolfgang Sommergut. After importing the CSV file, don't forget to go back and disable this functionality.

The Mozilla Firefox specific CSV file is SDDCLab_Credentials_for_Firefox.csv.

Usage

To deploy a Pod:

  1. Generate a Pod configuration with:
    ansible-playbook ~/git/SDDC.Lab/playbooks/CreatePodConfig.yml

  2. Start a Pod deployment per the instructions. For example:
    ansible-playbook -e "@~/Pod-230-Config_VCSAv7.00U3H_ESXIv7.00U3G_NSXTv4.0.0.1_Fed-N.yml" ~/git/SDDC.Lab/Deploy.yml

Deploying an SDDC Pod will take somewhere between 1 and 1.5 hours depending on your environment and Pod configuration.

Similary you remove an SDDC Pod with:
ansible-playbook -e "@~/Pod-Pod-230-Config_VCSAv7.00U3H_ESXIv7.00U3G_NSXTv4.0.0.1_Fed-N.yml" ~/git/SDDC.Lab/Undeploy.yml

Project Features

Below are some project features that we feel are important enough to provide further explanation on, along with the SDDC.Lab version it was introduced in.

NSX-T Federation (v4)

When deploying NSX-T Federation, keep the following in mind:

  1. Each NSX-T Location will be deployed from a separate SDDC.Lab Pod configuration file.

  2. All of the Pods that are participating in the NSX-T Federation deployment (i.e. Which will become NSX-T Locations) need to have Deploy.Product.NSXT.Federation.Deploy = true set in their configuration file.

  3. The Global Manager Cluster (single VM) will be deployed by the Pod specified by Deploy.Product.NSXT.GlobalManager.SiteCode. As the value of this variable for each Pod defaults to their own SiteCode, this value can be left at default for the Pod deploying the Global Manager. All other Pods participating in NSX-T Federation need to update this value to the SiteCode of the Pod deploying the Global Manager. For example, if "Pod-100" is deploying the Global Manager, then the other Pods need to change this variable in their respective configurations to "Pod-100".

  4. The Pod responsible for deploying the Global Manager Cluster is responsible for many aspects of the NSX-T Federation deployment. Because of these extra steps, there may be instances when the other Pods are waiting for some component to come on-line. This is normal and by design.

  5. NSX-T Federation can only be deployed as part of a complete Pod deployment. For that reason, the following Pod Configuration settings must all be enabled to deploy NSX-T Federation:
    a) Deploy.Product.NSXT.Federation.Deploy = true
    b) Deploy.Product.NSXT.LocalManager.Deploy = true
    c) Deploy.Product.NSXT.Edge.Deploy = true

  6. NSX-T Federation requires an NSX-T Enterprise Plus license, so be sure the proper license is included in your licenses.yml file.

  7. SDDC.Lab only supports one (1) Tier-0 Gateway when NSX-T Federation is configured. This Tier-0 Gateway will become the Stretched Tier-0 Gateway.

  8. NSX-T Federation support is still being developed, so there might be some functional items missing as part of the automated deployment.

  9. The config_sample.yml default configuration assumes the Lab-Routers transit segment, and thus communication between NSX-T Federation Locations, is configured with an MTU of 1500 bytes. If your environment supports Jumbo Frames, you can obtain better performance by changing the MTU values in the Net section. Keep in mind that the OSPF (by default) requires matching MTU sizes, so you may lose peering with your ToR router. If you decide to change the MTU values, you need to take this all into account, and are on your own. For a lab, the default 1500 byte MTU configurations should suffice.

  10. SDDC.Lab does not support Federation with NSX-T v3.2.x. If you want to deploy Federation in your lab, you have two options:
    a) Deploy Federation using NSX-T v3.1.3.7, then manually upgrade the Pods to NSX-T v3.2.x.
    b) Use NSX v4.1.0.0, as Federation issues are resolved in that release.

  11. Automatic Deployment of Test Workloads is supported with Federation. Just keep in mind that although the workloads can be deployed, the DHCP Server functionality is not supported on Federated stretched NSX segments, so you will need to manually assign static IPv4/IPv6 addresses to the workloads after they are deployed.

vSphere Content Libraries (v4 & updated in v5)

SDDC.Lab now supports both local and subscribed vSphere Content Libraries, which can be very helpful in a lab environment by centralizing workload ISOs and VMs (i.e. On the physical vCenter Server or a stand-alone Content Library target), then accessing them via the deployed Pods. There are a few things to keep in mind with Content Libraries:

  1. Make sure to provision sufficient Pod storage to store whatever content items are used.

  2. If a specific datatstore is not specified in the config_sample.yml file (default), then the datastore used is dynamically selected from the available vSphere clusters. If multiple vSphere clusters are deployed, the 'Edge' datastore is not used as it's assumed it's storage will be needed for NSX-T EdgeVMs.

  3. By default, config_sample.yml assumes the published content library exists on the physical vCenter Server servicing the SDDC.Lab environment. The default name of this content library is SDDC.Lab Content Library. Although this entry is included in the config_sample.yml file, it is not enabled by default. In order to replicate the content library from the physical vCenter Server, you must enable this content library.

In SDDC.Lab v5, the following functionality was added to Content Library support:

  1. Multiple content libraries are now supported.

  2. Content libraries located on the Internet are now supported.

Deploy Test Workloads (v4)

SDDC.Lab has a feature where it can automatically deploy test workload VMs from the Pod's content library at the end of the Pod deployment process. The test workload VMs to deploy are defined in the WorkloadVMs section of the config_sample.yml file. The default test workload VM included in config_sample.yml is called TinyVM, and it can be downloaded from the TinyVM project site. If you decide to leverage this feature, here are the items that need to be configured to enable the deployment of test workload VMs:

  1. On your physical vCenter Server, create a content library called SDDC.Lab Content Library, and enable the Enable publishing flag.

  2. Add your test VM(s) to the SDDC.Lab Content Library on the physical vCenter Server.

  3. Have your Pod's content library subscribe to the SDDC.Lab Content Library on the physical vCenter Server. This is done by changing Nested_vCenter.ContentLibrary.Type to subscribed instead of local.

  4. Configure your test VM workloads in the WorkloadVMs section of config_sample.yml.

  5. Enable the WorkloadVMs functionality by setting Deploy.WorkloadVMs.Deploy to true in the config_sample.yml file. By default, this setting is set to false, thereby preventing the test workload VMs from being deployed.

Workload Management (v4)

SDDC.Lab can now enable Workload Management on nested vSphere Clusters during Pod deployment. This feature is enabled per vSphere Cluster under the Nested_Cluster section in your config.yml. When enabled a Tanzu Supervisor Cluster is automatically configured for the vSphere Cluster. Workload Management in SDDC.Lab relies on the NSX-T Native Load Balancer so NSX-T with an NSX-T Edge must also be deployed as part of the Pod. If you decide to leverage this feature, here are the items that need to be configured to enable the automatic configuration of Workload Management:

  1. Make sure that Deploy.Product.NSXT.LocalManager.Deploy and Deploy.Product.NSXT.Edge.Deploy settings are set to true in your config.yml. By default, these settings are set to true.

  2. Set the SupervisorCluster.Enable setting to true for a nested vSphere Cluster under the Nested_Cluster section in your config.yml. By default, this setting is set to false, thereby preventing Workload Management from being configured.

  3. Optionally, make changes to the other settings related to the Supervisor Cluster.

  4. After Pod deployment finishes you need to assign your Tanzu license to the Supervisor Cluster asset in the vCenter "Licenses" module. This is needed even when you have added a Tanzu license to your licenses.yml as currently it isn't possible to automate the Supervisor Cluster license assignment.

NSX-T Segment IP Subnet Auto-Allocation (v5)

SDDC.Lab has a feature where it can automatically assign both IPv4 and IPv6 IP subnet addresses to NSX-T Segments included in your config.yml file. The benefit of using this feature is that it permits you to easily deploy Pods without having to manually configure non-overlapping IP subnets for each NSX-T Segment. Of course, if you have a need to manually specify the IP subnet used by a given NSX-T Segment, then you still have that flexibility, too, just as you continue to have the ability to create layer-2 only segments as well.

Here are the important settings to understand in order to properly utilize this feature:

  1. The Pod.BaseOverlay data structure in your config.yml file will control:
    a) What base network is used for both IPv4 and IPv6 auto-allocated IP subnets.
    b) What network prefix is used for the auto-allocated IP subnets. (See comments in config_sample.yml for additional information)
    c) What IP address range is configured on the DHCP server. (See RangePrefix below)

  2. If an NSX-T Segment does not have a Subnets: entry, then it's assumed to be Layer-2 only, and no IP address is included in the data structure that is created.

  3. If an NSX-T Segment does have a Subnets: entry, and that entry has a list of IP subnets beneath it, then those explicitly mentioned subnets are allocated/assigned to the Segment. This is how you go about creating user-defined IP subnets for a given NSX-T Segment.

  4. If an NSX-T Segment does have a Subnets: entry, but that key does NOT have a list of IP subnets beneath it, then SDDC.Lab will dynamically assign subnets based on the settings within the Pod.BaseOverlay data structure. Whether IPv4 and IPv6 subnets are assigned is driven by the IPv4 and IPv6 Deploy.Setting values:
    a) If Deploy.Setting.IPv4: True, then an IPv4 subnet will be allocated.
    b) If Deploy.Setting.IPv6: True, then an IPv6 subnet will be allocated.

  5. The Pod.BaseOverlay.<IPVersion>.RangePrefix setting specifies the CIDR setting used by the DHCP Scope to create it's range of addresses from. The IP addresses comprised within this CIDR range is always the highest network within the provisioned IP subnet. For example, if the IP subnet that is provisioned is 10.204.60.0/24, and if the Pod.BaseOverlay.IPv4.RangePrefix setting is set to 28, the IPv4 range configured on the DHCP Scope will be 10.204.60.241-10.204.60.254. DHCP ranges are created for both IPv4 and IPv6 subnets.

Memory Reservation & Shares (v6)

SDDC.Lab now helps you optimize your SDDC.Lab performance by allowing you to configure memory Reservation and Share settings for your Pod VMs. Of course, you will need sufficient available memory to take advantage of this.

Here are the important settings to understand in order to utilize this feature:

  1. The Common.DeploymentSetting data structure within the config.yml functions as the central location to define the default settings that you want to use for the entire Pod being deployed.

  2. Most of the included Nested_xxx entries in the config.yml file include DeploymentSetting within it. By default, these all get their settings from the Common.DeploymentSetting values. However, if you want to over-ride the default settings for a particular nested component, you can do so by just filling in the DeploymentSetting structure for that given component.

  3. The two items that can be configured are:
    a) DeploymentSetting.Hardware.Memory.Shares
    b) DeploymentSetting.Hardware.Memory.ReserveAllGuestMemory

Finally, there are two items to be aware of:

  1. Pod components that are deployed from OVA files don't have their memory reservation or share settings set as part of the initial deployment, so those settings are configured AFTER the VM is deployed. As such, those memory settings will not be effective until the given VM is stopped and restarted.

  2. Pod components that are deployed from ISO files, which include Pod-Router and nested ESX hosts, do have their memory reservation and share settings configured as part of their initial deployment. As such, those memory settings are effective immediately, without the need to stop or restart them.

Known Items

Here are some known items to be aware of:

  1. If you attempt to deploy a pod, and receive a message indicating "Error rmdir /home/username/SDDC.Lab/Pod-###/iso: [Errno 39] Directory not empty: '/home/username/SDDC.Lab/Pod-###/iso'", that's because a previous pod deployment failed (for whatever reason), and some files remained in the /home/username/SDDC.Lab/Pod-### directory. To resolve this issue, delete the entire /home/username/SDDC.Lab/Pod-### directory, and then re-deploy the Pod. If an ISO image is still mounted (which you can check by running 'mount'), then you will need to unmount the ISO image before you can delete the /home/username/SDDC.Lab/Pod-### directory. In all examples, "username" is the name of hte logged in user, and the "###" of Pod-### is the 3-digit Pod Number.

  2. The DNS IPv6 reverse zone used is determined by the network used for BaseNetwork.IPv6:
    a) If it begins with "fd", then the zone used is d.f.ip6.arpa
    b) Otherwise, the zone used is a standard IPv6 reverse DNS zone for the configured /56 network

    This is important understand if you need to configure conditional forwarding to reach your SDDC.Lab environment.

  3. SDDC.Lab v3 requires Ansible version 2.10.1 (or later). Thus, if you are upgrading from SDDC.Lab v2, make sure you upgrade your Ansible to the latest version. To see your current Ansible version, run the following command: ansible --version

  4. If there is no local VyOS ISO image in the software repository, SDDC.Lab will automatically download and use the latest nightly build of VyOS. Keep in mind, however, that this nightly build is part of their development branch. Because of this, they may make changes to their product or command syntax as part of their development, which might break the deployment of the Pod-Router. For this reason, if/when you update your VyOS software image within the software repository, we recommend that you do not delete the existing file, but rather, rename it, so that you can always fall-back to that file should there be changes in the newer version. If after you download an updated VyOS image you are unable to ping across the Pod-Router, or if you notice the Pod-Router is missing some configuration, this is probably the cause. This is out of our control, and are very thankful to the VyOS team for providing the nightly image build to the public for free. That said, as we identify changes in the VyOS command syntax, we will do our best to implement those changes in future releases. As we make changes to this in our development branch, we'll do our best to also document them in the CHANGELOG.md file within our development branch.

  5. When deploying a Federation configuration using NSX v4.0.0.1, the Workload VM Ansible playbook will fail when the playbook attempts to connect the VM's vNIC to the stretched NSX-T segment. This is due to a NSX v4.0.0.1 bug related to onboarding of the an NSX Location into Federation. Hopefully this will be corrected soon in a subsequent NSX version. For additional information, please see "Issues With Various Software Versions" section below.

  6. If you are utilizing SDDC.Lab's content library functionality to subscribe to the SDDC.Lab Content Library on the physical vCenter Server, and are running into SSL issues, try deleting and recreating the content library on the physical vCenter Server. We are aware of one installation that ran into this, and we could find no issue with the Ansible playbooks. After the user deleted and recreated the content library on the phsycial vCenter Server, all the issues were resolved. We just thought we would mention this in case someone runs into the same issue.

  7. When Enhanced Link Mode (ELM) is enabled, which is accomplished by configuring Nested_vCenter.SSO.ReplicationPartner in the config.yml file, you may notice that some entites are not permanently licensed and are instead using the evaluation license. The reason is because every Pod which is deployed is licensed using the same licenses from the licenses.yml file. Independently, the Pods each have sufficient licenses, but when linked, because the same license key is used in each Pod, there aren't sufficient licenses. This is the case even if there are extra license available in the licenses.yml file as those extra licenses were not needed, and thus not applied, during each Pod deployment. To aid in resolving this, when Enhanced Link Mode (ELM) is enabled, all ESXi and vSAN licenses in the licenses.yml file are added to that Pod's vCenter Server, but not applied/associated with any assets. It's then up to the user to manually license each unlicensed asset within vCenter Server.

Issues With Various Software Versions

As we use SDDC.Lab in our labs, every now-and-then we notice some issues/problems. As we come across those, we'll try to very briefly document the versions and issue(s) below. We do not test every software version combination, so by no means should this be taken as a comprehensive list of what works and what doesn't. This is just a "best effort" from us, to you, in the hope that it saves you time and frustration. Versions listed below match up with the software version used in config_sample.yml and the version "label" used in Software.yml. Blank fields mean we believe they aren't relavent to the issue found, and thus, don't matter.

Date vCenter Server ESXi NSX-T Description Of Issue Documented By
5-JAN-2022 7.0.0U3 7.00U2A Migrating vDS Uplinks in CreateVds playbook fails. Deployed fine in ESXi v7.00U3. Luis Chanu
5-JAN-2022 3.2.0 NSX-T Federation deployment not supported. Luis Chanu
31-JAN-2022 3.2.0.1 NSX-T Federation deployment not supported. Luis Chanu
20-FEB-2022 3.2.0.1 NSX-T Global MTU Settings are not properly set. Luis Chanu
12-AUG-2022 4.0.0.1 There is a bug with NSX Federation onboarding such that imported local objects are not properly migrated to global objects. Because of this bug, you are unable to connect a VM's vNIC to imported stretched NSX Segments. Luis Chanu
11-OCT-2022 8.0.0 (Build 20519528) 8.0.0 (Build 20513097) 4.0.0.1 Although v8.0.0 of vCenter Server and ESXi deploy successfully using SDDC.Lab, NSX fails when it attempts to apply the Transport Node Profile to the vSphere cluster. It fails with the following error message, "NSX cannot be enabled on the cluster because it contains host 6e6954ea-2f6a-491a-a3d4-34ea27078709:host-14 of unsupported version." So, it appears the next version of NSX is required in order to support vSphere 8.0.0 (GA). Luis Chanu
14-OCT-2022 8.0.0 (Build 20519528) 8.0.0 (Build 20513097) 4.0.1.1 NSX-T Federation deployment is not supported due to a Federation onboarding bug with NSX where the Segment paths are not correct within vCenter Server. Luis Chanu
26-APR-2023 7.0.0U3L 7.0.0U3L 3.2.2.1 NSX-T Federation deployment is not supported due to a Federation onboarding bug with NSX where the Segment paths are not correct within vCenter Server. This is the same issue discovered with NSX v4.0.1.1. Luis Chanu
09-JUL-2024 N/A N/A N/A PIP3 ansible package v10.1.0 causes "/bin/sh: 1: /usr/bin/env python: not found\n" failure during deployment. Solution is to install ansible package v9.7.0. Luis Chanu

More Information

For detailed installation, preparation, and deployment steps, please see the "Deploying your first SDDC.Lab Pod" document.

We also suggest that you watch our vBrownBag video from VMworld 2021. In that video, we provide an overview of the SDDC.Lab environment, and go over the various configuration files that need to be modified to deploy your first SDDC.Lab Pod. We also explain the Pod configuration file, along with the reason why the CreatePodConfig.yml playbook needs to be run. Keep in mind that this video is based on SDDC.Lab version 3.

Credits

A big thank you to Yasen Simeonov. His project at https://github.com/yasensim/vsphere-lab-deploy was the inspiration for this project. Another big thank you to my companion and lead developer Luis Chanu (VCDX #246) for pushing this project forward all the time. Last but not least thank you vCommunity for trying this out and providing valuable feedback.

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Ansible playbooks for automated deployment and configuration of a nested vSphere environment with NSX-T

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