![]() ![]() Now some quick EIGRP to get R1 & R2 routing together.Īnd now we can check routs on R2, and see it’s learnt the routes from R1: This gives me an easy way to ‘view’ into what is going on for my client to connect to the server. Rundll32.exe vmnetcfglib.dll VMNetUI_ShowStandalone  However I found if you have access to a new version of VMware Workstation you can just snag these two files, and run them like this (as administrator): ![]() The feature was available in earlier versions of VMWare Player, but the needed files were removed in the latest version.  So this way I can setup VMWare network interfaces which GNS3 can then latch onto with pcap.  But I was able to persuade a user to extract “VMware Workstation 10.0.2 build 1744117”, and retrieve two files for me,  vmnetcfg.exe and vmnetcfglib.dll.  The people financing this insane project have things like VMWare workstation but I have to download it through them, and their link is insanely slow, so I’m sticking with the player for now. ![]() So ideally the best  bet is to tie them all together, and I found a way.įirst I’m using VMWare Player version 6.0.1 build-1379776.  Which I know it isn’t fair to compare something like Virtual Box to VMWare.  The SQL server stuff can be any version, so even NT 4.0/SQL 7 is fine which GNS3’s Qemu can run, but it is kind of slow.  Also running things like Windows Server 2008r2 and ESXi run best under VMware.  The Qemu bundled with GNS3 horribly ancient, and my attempt to drop in Qemu 1.6.0 just fails. ![]() Now the problem is that takes a little bit of everything.  For routing I need Junos and cisco IOS. In my “LAB” I want to have a ESXi host talking to vCenter, and I wanted to setup a custom logging program which logs to MSSQL, and Maybe Oracle.  And well, I hit a roadblock of a strange kind. Since only one Tunnel Service can operate in one Tunnel Appliance, deploy and configure a second Tunnel Appliance in the Cloud Director site for High Availability (HA).Well I’ve been back using GNS3 to simulate some networks professionally. To allow the cloud site to remain operational in case the Tunnel Service becomes unavailable, VMware Cloud Director Availability can operate a couple of Tunnel Service instances in active-active mode per each Cloud Service instance. Add a second Tunnel Appliance for HA in the Cloud Director site.Add an additional Replicator Service instance in the Cloud Director siteĪs a provider, depending on the deployment requirements, you can add more Replicator Service instances to the Cloud Director site after configuring the Cloud Service.By following the wizard, register this Cloud Service with one or more Replicator Service instances and with the primary* Tunnel Service. Configure the Cloud Service in the Cloud Director siteĮnter a site name as an identifier of this Cloud Service instance and register this Cloud Service with VMware Cloud Director™ and with the local vCenter Server Lookup service.On the System health page, the entries show green to indicate the successfully configured services. Then, to allow for pairing, perform the initial configuration and the registration in the remote VMware Cloud Director Availability site.Īfter configuring the VMware Cloud Director Availability services, you can validate that the setup is complete by opening the service management interface. One, or optionally, two Tunnel Appliance instances, where each appliance runs one Tunnel Service instance.įor information about the architecture and each appliance role, see Deployment architecture in the Cloud Director site.Īs a best practice, first configure all services in a single cloud site: register the Cloud Service with VMware Cloud Director, with the vCenter Server Lookup service, with the Replicator Service instances in the same site, and with the single or, optionally, dual Tunnel Service instances in active-active mode for high availability (HA).One or more Replicator Appliance instances, where each appliance runs one Replicator Service instance.One Cloud Director Replication Management Appliance, where the appliance runs the Cloud Service.VMware Cloud Director Availability appliances: VMware Cloud Director, all of the following Note: In the previous chapter you deployed in a production cloud site backed by ![]()
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