6.0.3

Table Of Contents
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Verify that the host machine has a valid IPv4 address. You can install vSphere Authentication Proxy on
a machine in an IPv4-only or IPv4/IPv6 mixed-mode network environment, but you cannot install
vSphere Authentication Proxy on a machine in an IPv6-only environment.
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If you are installing vSphere Authentication Proxy on a Windows Server 2008 R2 host machine,
download and install the Windows hotx described in Windows KB Article 981506 on the
support.microsoft.com Web site. If this hotx is not installed, the vSphere Authentication Proxy
Adapter fails to initialize. This problem is accompanied by error messages in camadapter.log similar to
Failed to bind CAM website with CTL and Failed to initialize CAMAdapter.
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Download the vCenter Server installer.
Gather the following information to complete the installation or upgrade:
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The location to install vSphere Authentication Proxy, if you are not using the default location.
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The address and credentials for the vCenter Server that vSphere Authentication Proxy will connect to:
IP address or name, HTTP port, user name, and password.
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The host name or IP address to identify vSphere Authentication Proxy on the network.
Procedure
1 Add the host machine where you will install the authentication proxy service to the domain.
2 Use the Domain Administrator account to log in to the host machine.
3 In the software installer directory, double-click the autorun.exe le to start the installer.
4 Select VMware vSphere Authentication Proxy and click Install.
5 Follow the wizard prompts to complete the installation or upgrade.
During installation, the authentication service registers with the vCenter Server instance where Auto
Deploy is registered.
When you install the vSphere Authentication Proxy service, the installer creates a domain account with
appropriate privileges to run the authentication proxy service. The account name begins with the prex CAM-
and has a 32-character, randomly generated password associated with it. The password is set to never
expire. Do not change the account seings.
Configure a Host to Use Active Directory
You can congure a host to use a directory service such as Active Directory to manage users and groups.
When you add an ESXi host to Active Directory the DOMAIN group ESX Admins is assigned full
administrative access to the host if it exists. If you do not want to make full administrative access available,
see VMware Knowledge Base article 1025569 for a workaround.
If a host is provisioned with Auto Deploy, Active Directory credentials cannot be stored on the hosts. You
can use the vSphere Authentication Proxy to join the host to an Active Directory domain. Because a trust
chain exists between the vSphere Authentication Proxy and the host, the Authentication Proxy can join the
host to the Active Directory domain. See “Using vSphere Authentication Proxy,” on page 192.
N When you dene user account seings in Active Directory, you can limit the computers that a user
can log in to by the computer name. By default, no equivalent restrictions are set on a user account. If you
set this limitation, LDAP Bind requests for the user account fail with the message LDAP binding not
successful, even if the request is from a listed computer. You can avoid this issue by adding the netBIOS
name for the Active Directory server to the list of computers that the user account can log in to.
Prerequisites
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Verify that you have an Active Directory domain. See your directory server documentation.
vSphere Security
190 VMware, Inc.