11 KiB
series | date | header | tags | title | ||||||
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vRA8 | 2021-07-21T00:00:00Z |
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Joining VMs to Active Directory in site-specific OUs with vRA8 |
Connecting a deployed Windows VM to an Active Directory domain is pretty easy; just apply an appropriately-configured customization spec and vCenter will take care of it for you. Of course, you'll likely then need to move the newly-created computer object to the correct Organizational Unit so that it gets all the right policies and such.
Fortunately, vRA 8 supports adding an Active Directory integration to handle staging computer objects in a designated OU. And vRA 8.3 even introduced the ability to let blueprints override the relative DN path. That will be helpful in my case since I'll want the servers to be placed in different OUs depending on which site they get deployed to:
Site | OU |
---|---|
BOW |
lab.bowdre.net/LAB/BOW/Computers/Servers |
DRE |
lab.bowre.net/LAB/DRE/Computers/Servers |
I didn't find a lot of documentation on how make this work, though, so here's how I've implemented it in my lab (now running vRA 8.4.2).
Adding the AD integration
First things first: connecting vRA to AD. I do this by opening the Cloud Assembly interface, navigating to Infrastructure > Connections > Integrations, and clicking the Add Integration button. I'm then prompted to choose the integration type so I select the Active Directory one, and then I fill in the required information: a name (Lab AD
seems appropriate), my domain controller as the LDAP host (ldap://win01.lab.bowdre.net:389
), credentials for an account with sufficient privileges to create and delete computer objects (lab\vra
), and finally the base DN to be used for the LDAP connection (DC=lab,DC=bowdre,DC=net
).
Clicking the Validate button quickly confirms that I've entered the information correctly, and then I can click Add to save my work.
I'll then need to associate the integration with a project by opening the new integration, navigating to the Projects tab, and clicking Add Project. Now I select the project name from the dropdown, enter a valid relative OU (OU=LAB
), and enable the options to let me override the relative OU and optionally skip AD actions from the cloud template.
Customization specs
As mentioned above, I'll leverage the customization specs in vCenter to handle the actual joining of a computer to the domain. I maintain two specs for Windows deployments (one to join the domain and one to stay on the workgroup), and I can let the vRA cloud template decide which should be applied to a given deployment.
First, the workgroup spec, appropriately called vra-win-workgroup
:
It's about as basic as can be, including using DHCP for the network configuration (which doesn't really matter since the VM will eventually get a static IP assigned from {php}IPAM).
vra-win-domain
is basically the same, with one difference:
Now to reference these specs from a cloud template...
Cloud template
I want to make sure that users requesting a deployment are able to pick whether or not a system should be joined to the domain, so I'm going to add that as an input option on the template:
inputs:
[...]
adJoin:
title: Join to AD domain
type: boolean
default: true
[...]
This new adJoin
input is a boolean so it will appear on the request form as a checkbox, and it will default to true
; we'll assume that any Windows deployment should be automatically joined to AD unless this option gets unchecked.
In the resources
section of the template, I'll set a new property called ignoreActiveDirectory
to be the inverse of the adJoin
input; that will tell the AD integration not to do anything if the box to join the VM to the domain is unchecked. I'll also use activeDirectory: relativeDN
to insert the appropriate site code into the DN where the computer object will be created. And, finally, I'll reference the customizationSpec
and use cloud template conditional syntax to apply the correct spec based on whether it's a domain or workgroup deployment. (These conditionals take the pattern '${conditional-expresion ? true-value : false-value}'
).
resources:
Cloud_vSphere_Machine_1:
type: Cloud.vSphere.Machine
properties:
[...]
ignoreActiveDirectory: '${!input.adJoin}'
activeDirectory:
relativeDN: '${"OU=Servers,OU=Computers,OU=" + input.site + ",OU=LAB"}'
customizationSpec: '${input.adJoin ? "vra-win-domain" : "vra-win-workgroup"}'
[...]
Here's the current cloud template in its entirety:
formatVersion: 1
inputs:
site:
type: string
title: Site
enum:
- BOW
- DRE
image:
type: string
title: Operating System
oneOf:
- title: Windows Server 2019
const: ws2019
default: ws2019
size:
title: Resource Size
type: string
oneOf:
- title: 'Micro [1vCPU|1GB]'
const: micro
- title: 'Tiny [1vCPU|2GB]'
const: tiny
- title: 'Small [2vCPU|2GB]'
const: small
default: small
network:
title: Network
type: string
adJoin:
title: Join to AD domain
type: boolean
default: true
environment:
type: string
title: Environment
oneOf:
- title: Development
const: D
- title: Testing
const: T
- title: Production
const: P
default: D
function:
type: string
title: Function Code
oneOf:
- title: Application (APP)
const: APP
- title: Desktop (DSK)
const: DSK
- title: Network (NET)
const: NET
- title: Service (SVS)
const: SVS
- title: Testing (TST)
const: TST
default: TST
app:
type: string
title: Application Code
minLength: 3
maxLength: 3
default: xxx
description:
type: string
title: Description
description: Server function/purpose
default: Testing and evaluation
poc_name:
type: string
title: Point of Contact Name
default: Jack Shephard
poc_email:
type: string
title: Point of Contact Email
default: jack.shephard@virtuallypotato.com
pattern: '^[^\s@]+@[^\s@]+\.[^\s@]+$'
ticket:
type: string
title: Ticket/Request Number
default: 4815162342
resources:
Cloud_vSphere_Machine_1:
type: Cloud.vSphere.Machine
properties:
image: '${input.image}'
flavor: '${input.size}'
site: '${input.site}'
environment: '${input.environment}'
function: '${input.function}'
app: '${input.app}'
ignoreActiveDirectory: '${!input.adJoin}'
activeDirectory:
relativeDN: '${"OU=Servers,OU=Computers,OU=" + input.site + ",OU=LAB"}'
customizationSpec: '${input.adJoin ? "vra-win-domain" : "vra-win-workgroup"}'
dnsDomain: lab.bowdre.net
poc: '${input.poc_name + " (" + input.poc_email + ")"}'
ticket: '${input.ticket}'
description: '${input.description}'
networks:
- network: '${resource.Cloud_vSphere_Network_1.id}'
assignment: static
constraints:
- tag: 'comp:${to_lower(input.site)}'
Cloud_vSphere_Network_1:
type: Cloud.vSphere.Network
properties:
networkType: existing
constraints:
- tag: 'net:${input.network}'
The last thing I need to do before leaving the Cloud Assembly interface is smash that Version button at the bottom of the cloud template editor so that the changes will be visible to Service Broker:
Service Broker custom form updates
... and the first thing to do after entering the Service Broker UI is to navigate to Content Sources, click on my Lab content source, and then click Save & Import to bring in the new version. I can then go to Content, click the little three-dot menu icon next to my WindowsDemo
cloud template, and pick the Customize form option.
This bit will be pretty quick. I just need to look for the new Join to AD domain
element on the left:
And drag-and-drop it onto the canvas in the middle. I'll stick it directly after the Network
field:
I don't need to do anything else here since I'm not trying to do any fancy logic or anything, so I'll just hit Save and move on to...
Testing
Now to submit the request through Service Broker to see if this actually works:
After a few minutes, I can go into Cloud Assembly and navigate to Extensibility > Activity > Actions Runs and look at the Integration Runs to see if the ad_machine
action has completed yet.
Looking good! And once the deployment completes, I can look at the VM in vCenter to see that it has registered a fully-qualified DNS name since it was automatically joined to the domain:
I can also repeat the test for a VM deployed to the DRE
site just to confirm that it gets correctly placed in that site's OU:
And I'll fire off another deployment with the adJoin
box unchecked to test that I can also skip the AD configuration completely:
Conclusion
Confession time: I had actually started writing this posts weeks ago. At that point, my efforts to bend the built-in AD integration to my will had been fairly unsuccessful, so I was instead working on a custom vRO workflow to accomplish the same basic thing. I circled back to try the AD integration again after upgrading the vRA environment to the latest 8.4.2 release, and found that it actually works quite well now. So I happily scrapped my ~50 lines of messy vRO JavaScript in favor of just three lines of YAML in the cloud template.
I love it when things work out!