5.5.2
Table Of Contents
- Using VMware vCenter Orchestrator Plug-Ins
- Contents
- Using VMware vCenter Orchestrator Plug-Ins
- Introduction to Orchestrator Plug-Ins
- Configure the Orchestrator Plug-Ins
- Using the vCenter Server Plug-In
- Configuring the vCenter Server Plug-In
- vCenter Server Plug-In Scripting API
- Using the vCenter Server Plug-In Inventory
- Access the vCenter Server Plug-In Workflow Library
- vCenter Server Plug-In Workflow Library
- Batch Workflows
- Cluster and Compute Resource Workflows
- Custom Attributes Workflows
- Datacenter Workflows
- Datastore and Files Workflows
- Datacenter Folder Management Workflows
- Host Folder Management Workflows
- Virtual Machine Folder Management Workflows
- Guest Operation Files Workflows
- Guest Operation Processes Workflows
- Power Host Management Workflows
- Basic Host Management Workflows
- Host Registration Management Workflows
- Networking Workflows
- Distributed Virtual Port Group Workflows
- Distributed Virtual Switch Workflows
- Standard Virtual Switch Workflows
- Resource Pool Workflows
- Storage Workflows
- Storage DRS Workflows
- Basic Virtual Machine Management Workflows
- Clone Workflows
- Linked Clone Workflows
- Linux Customization Clone Workflows
- Tools Clone Workflows
- Windows Customization Clone Workflows
- Device Management Workflows
- Move and Migrate Workflows
- Other Workflows
- Power Management Workflows
- Snapshot Workflows
- VMware Tools Workflows
- Using the Configuration Plug-In
- Using the vCO Library Plug-In
- Using the SQL Plug-In
- Using the SSH Plug-In
- Using the XML Plug-In
- Using the Mail Plug-In
- Using the Net Plug-In
- Using the Enumeration Plug-In
- Using the Workflow Documentation Plug-In
- Using the HTTP-REST Plug-In
- Using the SOAP Plug-In
- Using the AMQP Plug-In
- Using the SNMP Plug-In
- Using the Active Directory Plug-In
- Using the Dynamic Types Plug-In
- Configuring and Using the Multi-Node Plug-In
- Using the PowerShell Plug-In
- Using the PowerShell Plug-In Inventory
- Configuring the PowerShell Plug-In
- Running PowerShell Scripts
- Generating Actions
- Passing Invocation Results Between Actions
- PowerCLI Integration with the PowerShell Plug-In
- Sample Workflows
- Access the PowerShell Plug-In API
- Working with PowerShell Results
- Examples of Scripts for Common PowerShell Tasks
- Troubleshooting
- Index
4 Select a broker in which you want create a binding.
5 Provide information about the binding.
Option Action
Queue name
Type the name of the queue.
Exchange name
Type the name of the exchange.
Routing key
Type the routing key.
6 Click Submit to run the workflow.
Declare a Queue
You can run a workflow to add a queue to a specified broker.
Prerequisites
n
Verify that you are logged in to the Orchestrator client as an administrator.
n
Verify that you have a connection to an AMQP broker from the Inventory view.
Procedure
1 Click the Workflows view in the Orchestrator client.
2 In the hierarchical list of workflows, select Library > AMQP and navigate to the Declare a queue
workflow.
3 Right-click the Declare a queue workflow and select Start workflow.
4 Select a broker to which you want to add the queue.
5 In the Name text box, type the name of the queue to display.
6 Select whether the queue is durable.
Option Description
Yes
The queue is removed after a broker restart.
No
The queue remains after a broker restart.
7 Select whether an exclusive client is set for the specific queue.
Option Description
Yes
Sets one client for this specific queue.
No
Sets more clients for this specific queue.
8 Select whether to automatically delete the queue with activated subscription.
Option Description
Yes
Automatically deletes the queue when no more clients are connected to it.
The queue remains until at least one client subscribes to it.
No
Does not automatically delete the queue.
9 Click Submit to run the workflow.
Using VMware vCenter Orchestrator Plug-Ins
94 VMware, Inc.