6.0.3

Table Of Contents
Best Practices Involving Multiple
vSphere Components 9
Some security best practices, such as seing up NTP in your environment, aect more than one vSphere
component. Consider these recommendations when conguring your environment.
See Chapter 5, “Securing ESXi Hosts,” on page 153 and Chapter 7, “Securing Virtual Machines,” on page 217
for related information.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Synchronizing Clocks on the vSphere Network,” on page 247
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“Storage Security Best Practices,” on page 250
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“Verify That Sending Host Performance Data to Guests is Disabled,” on page 252
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“Seing Timeouts for the ESXi Shell and vSphere Web Client,” on page 253
Synchronizing Clocks on the vSphere Network
Make sure that all components on the vSphere network have their clocks synchronized. If the clocks on the
machines in your vSphere network are not synchronized, SSL certicates, which are time-sensitive, might
not be recognized as valid in communications between network machines.
Unsynchronized clocks can result in authentication problems, which can cause the installation to fail or
prevent the vCenter Server Appliance vpxd service from starting.
Make sure any Windows host machine on which a vCenter component runs is synchronized with the NTP
server. See the Knowledge Base article hp://kb.vmware.com/kb/1318.
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Synchronize ESXi Clocks with a Network Time Server on page 247
Before you install vCenter Server or deploy the vCenter Server Appliance, make sure all machines on
your vSphere network have their clocks synchronized.
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Conguring Time Synchronization Seings in the vCenter Server Appliance on page 248
You can change the time synchronization seings in the vCenter Server Appliance after deployment.
Synchronize ESXi Clocks with a Network Time Server
Before you install vCenter Server or deploy the vCenter Server Appliance, make sure all machines on your
vSphere network have their clocks synchronized.
This task explains how to set up NTP from the vSphere Client. You can instead use the vicfg-ntp vCLI
command. See the vSphere Command-Line Interface Reference.
Procedure
1 Start the vSphere Client, and connect to the ESXi host.
VMware, Inc.
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