Installation guide

Table Of Contents
Figure 12-2. vSphere Components with a vCenter Server System
vCenter
database
shared
datastore
datastore
VM VM VM
vCenter
Agent
vCenter
Server
vCenter
Agent
vCenter
Agent
VM VM VM VM VM VM
ESX/ESXi host ESX/ESXi host ESX/ESXi host
vSphere
Client
Tomcat
service
LDAP
server
vSphere
Client
vSphere
Client
vSphere
Client
vSphere
Client
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Changing Virtual Machine Power States,” on page 136
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“Adding and Removing Virtual Machines,” on page 139
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“Configure Virtual Machine Startup and Shutdown Behavior,” on page 140
Changing Virtual Machine Power States
The power state of a virtual machine indicates whether the virtual machine is active and functional.
There are several access points for making changes to power states:
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Selecting the virtual machine and the power option from the Inventory > Virtual Machine menu.
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Selecting Power on from the Commands area.
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Selecting the power option from the right-click menu.
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Scheduling a power state change using the Scheduled Tasks button in the navigation bar.
Power on
Powers on the virtual machine and boots the guest operating system if the guest
operating system is installed. When applied to a suspended virtual machine,
allows virtual machine activity to continue and releases the suspended state.
Power off
Powers off the virtual machine. The virtual machine does not attempt to shut
down the guest operating system gracefully.
Suspend
Pauses the virtual machine activity. All virtual machine operations are frozen
until you issue a resume command.
Reset
Shuts down the guest operating system and restarts it.
vSphere Basic System Administration
136 VMware, Inc.