6.0.3

Table Of Contents
Use Scripts to Manage Host Configuration Settings
In environments with many hosts, managing hosts with scripts is faster and less error prone than managing
the hosts from the vSphere Web Client.
vSphere includes several scripting languages for host management. See the vSphere Command-Line
Documentation and the vSphere API/SDK Documentation for reference information and programming tips and
VMware Communities for additional tips about scripted management. The vSphere Administrator
documentation focuses on using the vSphere Web Client for management.
vSphere PowerCLI
VMware vSphere PowerCLI is a Windows PowerShell interface to the
vSphere API. vSphere PowerCLI includes PowerShell cmdlets for
administering vSphere components.
vSphere PowerCLI includes more than 200 cmdlets, a set of sample scripts,
and a function library for management and automation. See the vSphere
PowerCLI Documentation.
vSphere Command-Line
Interface (vCLI)
vCLI includes a set of commands for managing ESXi hosts and virtual
machines. The installer, which also installs the vSphere SDK for Perl, runs
Windows or Linux systems and installs ESXCLI commands, vicfg-
commands, and a set of other vCLI commands. See vSphere Command-Line
Interface Documentation.
Starting with vSphere 6.0, you can also use one of the scripting interfaces to the vCloud Suite SDK such as
the vCloud Suite SDK for Python.
Procedure
1 Create a custom role that has limited privileges.
For example, consider creating a role that has a set of privileges for managing hosts but no privileges
for managing virtual machines, storage, or networking. If the script you want to use only extracts
information, you can create a role with read-only privileges for the host.
2 From the vSphere Web Client, create a service account and assign it the custom role.
You can create multiple custom roles with dierent levels of access if you want access to certain hosts to
be fairly limited.
vSphere Security
154 VMware, Inc.