Merge branch 'main' into staging

This commit is contained in:
John Bowdre 2022-07-29 08:32:53 -05:00
commit 7b22a5aa99
3 changed files with 34 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
--- ---
title: "Gitea: Ultralight Self-Hosted Git Server" # Title of the blog post. title: "Gitea: Ultralight Self-Hosted Git Server" # Title of the blog post.
date: 2022-07-22 # Date of post creation. date: 2022-07-22 # Date of post creation.
# lastmod: 2022-07-04T14:05:02-05:00 # Date when last modified lastmod: 2022-07-27
description: "Deploying the lightweight Gitea Git server on Oracle Cloud's free Ampere Compute." description: "Deploying the lightweight Gitea Git server on Oracle Cloud's free Ampere Compute."
featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar. featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar.
draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered. draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered.
@ -456,7 +456,7 @@ And after just a few moments, all the content from my GitHub repo shows up in my
![Mirrored repo](mirrored_repo.png) ![Mirrored repo](mirrored_repo.png)
You might noticed that I unchecked the *Make Repository Private* option for this one, so feel free to browse the mirrored repo at https://git.bowdre.net/john/vrealize if you'd like to check out Gitea for yourself. You might noticed that I unchecked the *Make Repository Private* option for this one, so feel free to browse the mirrored repo at https://git.bowdre.net/vPotato/vrealize if you'd like to check out Gitea for yourself.
#### Create a new repo #### Create a new repo
The real point of this whole exercise was to sync my Obsidian vault to a Git server under my control, so it's time to create a place for that content to live. I'll go to the **+** menu again but this time select **New Repository**, and then enter the required information: The real point of this whole exercise was to sync my Obsidian vault to a Git server under my control, so it's time to create a place for that content to live. I'll go to the **+** menu again but this time select **New Repository**, and then enter the required information:

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@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
--- ---
series: vRA8 series: vRA8
date: "2021-02-22T08:34:30Z" date: "2021-02-22T08:34:30Z"
lastmod: 2022-07-25
thumbnail: 7_QI-Ti8g.png thumbnail: 7_QI-Ti8g.png
usePageBundles: true usePageBundles: true
tags: tags:
@ -119,9 +120,13 @@ We should also go ahead and create a Nameserver set so that phpIPAM will be able
Okay, we're finally ready to start entering our subnets at **Administration > IP related management > Subnets**. For each one, I entered the Subnet in CIDR format, gave it a useful description, and associated it with my `Lab` section. I expanded the *VLAN* dropdown and used the *Add new VLAN* option to enter the corresponding VLAN information, and also selected the Nameserver I had just created. Okay, we're finally ready to start entering our subnets at **Administration > IP related management > Subnets**. For each one, I entered the Subnet in CIDR format, gave it a useful description, and associated it with my `Lab` section. I expanded the *VLAN* dropdown and used the *Add new VLAN* option to enter the corresponding VLAN information, and also selected the Nameserver I had just created.
![Entering the first subnet](-PHf9oUyM.png) ![Entering the first subnet](-PHf9oUyM.png)
I also enabled the options *Mark as pool*, *Check hosts status*, *Discover new hosts*, and *Resolve DNS names*. I also enabled the options ~~*Mark as pool*~~, *Check hosts status*, *Discover new hosts*, and *Resolve DNS names*.
![Subnet options](SR7oD0jsG.png) ![Subnet options](SR7oD0jsG.png)
{{% notice info "Update" %}}
Since releasing this integration, I've learned that phpIPAM intends for the `isPool` field to identify networks where the entire range (including the subnet and broadcast addresses) are available for assignment. As a result, I no longer recommend using that field. Instead, consider [creating a custom field](https://github.com/jbowdre/phpIPAM-for-vRA8/blob/main/docs/custom_field.md) for tagging networks for vRA availability.
{{% /notice %}}
I then used the *Scan subnets for new hosts* button to run a discovery scan against the new subnet. I then used the *Scan subnets for new hosts* button to run a discovery scan against the new subnet.
![Scanning for new hosts](4WQ8HWJ2N.png) ![Scanning for new hosts](4WQ8HWJ2N.png)
@ -287,6 +292,10 @@ You'll notice that the form includes fields for Username, Password, and Hostname
} }
} }
``` ```
{{% notice info "Update" %}}
Check out the [source on GitHub](https://github.com/jbowdre/phpIPAM-for-vRA8/blob/main/src/main/resources/endpoint-schema.json) to see how I adjusted the schema to support custom field input.
{{% /notice %}}
We've now got the framework in place so let's move on to the first operation we'll need to write. Each operation has its own subfolder under `./src/main/python/`, and each contains (among other things) a `requirements.txt` file which will tell Maven what modules need to be imported and a `source.py` file which is where the magic happens. We've now got the framework in place so let's move on to the first operation we'll need to write. Each operation has its own subfolder under `./src/main/python/`, and each contains (among other things) a `requirements.txt` file which will tell Maven what modules need to be imported and a `source.py` file which is where the magic happens.
### Step 5: 'Validate Endpoint' action ### Step 5: 'Validate Endpoint' action
@ -418,6 +427,23 @@ subnets = subnets.json()['data']
``` ```
I decided to add the extra `filter_by=isPool&filter_value=1` argument to the query so that it will only return subnets marked as a pool in phpIPAM. This way I can use phpIPAM for monitoring address usage on a much larger set of subnets while only presenting a handful of those to vRA. I decided to add the extra `filter_by=isPool&filter_value=1` argument to the query so that it will only return subnets marked as a pool in phpIPAM. This way I can use phpIPAM for monitoring address usage on a much larger set of subnets while only presenting a handful of those to vRA.
{{% notice info "Update" %}}
I now filter for networks identified by the designated custom field like so:
```python
# Request list of subnets
subnet_uri = f'{uri}/subnets/'
if enableFilter == "true":
queryFilter = f'filter_by={filterField}&filter_value={filterValue}'
logging.info(f"Searching for subnets matching filter: {queryFilter}")
else:
queryFilter = ''
logging.info(f"Searching for all known subnets")
ipRanges = []
subnets = requests.get(f'{subnet_uri}?{queryFilter}', headers=token, verify=cert)
subnets = subnets.json()['data']
```
{{% /notice %}}
Now is a good time to consult [that white paper](https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-Cloud-services/1.0/ipam_integration_contract_reqs.pdf) to confirm what fields I'll need to return to vRA. That lets me know that I'll need to return `ipRanges` which is a list of `IpRange` objects. `IpRange` requires `id`, `name`, `startIPAddress`, `endIPAddress`, `ipVersion`, and `subnetPrefixLength` properties. It can also accept `description`, `gatewayAddress`, and `dnsServerAddresses` properties, among others. Some of these properties are returned directly by the phpIPAM API, but others will need to be computed on the fly. Now is a good time to consult [that white paper](https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-Cloud-services/1.0/ipam_integration_contract_reqs.pdf) to confirm what fields I'll need to return to vRA. That lets me know that I'll need to return `ipRanges` which is a list of `IpRange` objects. `IpRange` requires `id`, `name`, `startIPAddress`, `endIPAddress`, `ipVersion`, and `subnetPrefixLength` properties. It can also accept `description`, `gatewayAddress`, and `dnsServerAddresses` properties, among others. Some of these properties are returned directly by the phpIPAM API, but others will need to be computed on the fly.
For instance, these are pretty direct matches: For instance, these are pretty direct matches:

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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
--- ---
title: "Removing and Recreating vCLS VMs" # Title of the blog post. title: "Removing and Recreating vCLS VMs" # Title of the blog post.
date: 2022-07-24 date: 2022-07-24
# lastmod: 2022-07-23T16:25:05-05:00 # Date when last modified lastmod: 2022-07-25 # Date when last modified
description: "How to remove and (optionally) recreate the vSphere Clustering Services VMs" # Description used for search engine. description: "How to remove and (optionally) recreate the vSphere Clustering Services VMs" # Description used for search engine.
featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar. featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar.
draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered. draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered.
@ -32,6 +32,10 @@ That's very cool, particularly in large continent-spanning environments or those
Fortunately there's a somewhat-hidden way to disable (and re-enable) vCLS on a per-cluster basis, and it's easy to do once you know the trick. This can help if you want to permanently disable vCLS (like in a lab environment) or if you just need to turn it off and on again[^off-and-on] to clean up and redeploy uncooperative agent VMs. Fortunately there's a somewhat-hidden way to disable (and re-enable) vCLS on a per-cluster basis, and it's easy to do once you know the trick. This can help if you want to permanently disable vCLS (like in a lab environment) or if you just need to turn it off and on again[^off-and-on] to clean up and redeploy uncooperative agent VMs.
{{% notice warning "Proceed at your own risk" %}}
Disabling vCLS will break DRS, and could have other unintended side effects. Don't do this in prod if you can avoid it.
{{% /notice %}}
[^off-and-on]: ![](off-and-on.gif) [^off-and-on]: ![](off-and-on.gif)
### Find the cluster's domain ID ### Find the cluster's domain ID