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For example, as a business group manager, you entitle your development team to a service that
includes three virtual machine catalog items. You apply an approval policy that requires the approval
of the virtual infrastructure administrator for machines with more than four CPUs. One of the virtual
machines is used for performance testing, so you add it as a catalog item and apply less restrictive
approval policy for the same group of users.
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Items that are not available for a service catalog user to request on their own because they are a
component of a provisionable item, but to which you want to apply a specific approval policy that
differs from the catalog item in which it is included.
For example, an item includes a machine and software. The machine is available as a provisionable
item and has an approval policy that requires site manager approval. The software is not available as
a standalone, provisionable item, only as part of a machine request, but the approval policy for the
software requires approval from your organization's software licensing administrator. When the
machine is requested in the services catalog, it must be approved by the site administrator and the
software licensing administrator before it is provisioned. After it is provisioned, the machine, with the
software entry, appears in the requestor's Items tab as part of the machine.
Actions
Actions run on provisioned catalog items. To provision a catalog item, you request the item in the service
catalog. To run actions on a provisioned item, the action must be included in the same entitlement as the
catalog item that provisioned the item from the service catalog.
For example, entitlement 1 includes a vSphere virtual machine and a create snapshot action, and
entitlement 2 includes only a vSphere virtual machine. When you deploy a vSphere machine from
entitlement 1, the create snapshot action is available. When you deploy a vSphere machine from
entitlement 2, there is no action. To make the action available to entitlement 2 users, add the create
snapshot action to entitlement 2.
If you select an action that is not applicable to any of the catalog items in the entitlement, it will not appear
as an action on the Items tab. For example, your entitlement includes a vSphere machine and you entitle
a destroy action for a cloud machine. The destroy action is not available to run on the provisioned
machine.
You can apply an approval policy to an action that is different from the policy applied to the catalog item in
the entitlement.
If the service catalog user is the member of multiple business groups, and one group is only entitled to
power on and power off and the other is only entitled to destroy, that user will have all three actions
available to them for the applicable provisioned machine.
Approval Policies
To apply an approval policy when you create the entitlement, the policy must already exist. If it does not,
you can still create the entitlement and leave it in a draft or inactive state until you create the approval
policies needed for the catalog items and actions in this entitlement, and then apply the policies later.
You are not required to apply an approval policy to any of the items or actions. If no approval policy is
applied, the items and actions are deployed when requested without triggering an approval request.
Configuring vRealize Automation
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