7.0

Table Of Contents
Results
The ESXi hosts boot by default from the new partition and operate as if the ESXi 7.0 image is
installed from a standard DVD.
What to do next
Add the ESXi hosts to a cluster that you manage by a single image. For more information, see
Add
a Host
from the
vCenter Server and Host Management
documentation.
vSphere Auto Deploy Best Practices and Security Consideration
Follow best practices when installing vSphere Auto Deploy and when using vSphere Auto Deploy
with other vSphere components. Set up a highly available vSphere Auto Deploy infrastructure in
large production environments or when using stateless caching. Follow all security guidelines that
you would follow in a PXE boot environment, and consider the recommendations in this chapter.
vSphere Auto Deploy Best Practices
You can follow several vSphere Auto Deploy best practices, set up networking, configure vSphere
HA, and otherwise optimize your environment for vSphere Auto Deploy.
See the VMware Knowledge Base for additional best practice information.
vSphere Auto Deploy and vSphere HA Best Practices
You can improve the availability of the virtual machines running on hosts provisioned with vSphere
Auto Deploy by following best practices.
Some environments configure the hosts provisioned with vSphere Auto Deploy with a distributed
switch or configure virtual machines running on the hosts with Auto Start Manager. In such
environments, deploy the vCenter Server system so that its availability matches the availability
of the vSphere Auto Deploy server. Several approaches are possible.
n Deploy vCenter Server. The vSphere Auto Deploy server is included.
n Run vCenter Server in a vSphere HA enabled cluster and configure the virtual machine with
a vSphere HA restart priority of high. Include two or more hosts in the cluster that are not
managed by vSphere Auto Deploy and pin the vCenter Server virtual machine to these hosts
by using a rule (vSphere HA DRS required VM to host rule). You can set up the rule and then
deactivate DRS if you do not want to use DRS in the cluster. The greater the number of hosts
that are not managed by vSphere Auto Deploy, the greater your resilience to host failures.
Note This approach is not suitable if you use Auto Start Manager. Auto Start Manager is not
supported in a cluster enabled for vSphere HA.
vSphere Auto Deploy Networking Best Practices
Prevent networking problems by following vSphere Auto Deploy networking best practices.
vSphere Auto Deploy and IPv6
Because vSphere Auto Deploy takes advantage of the iPXE infrastructure, if the hosts that you
plan to provision with vSphere Auto Deploy are with legacy BIOS, the vSphere Auto Deploy
VMware ESXi Installation and Setup
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