7.2

Table Of Contents
Procedure
1 Select Design > Blueprints.
2
Click the New icon ( ).
3 Enter Centos on vSphere in the Name text box.
4 Review the generated unique identifier.
You can edit this field now, but after you save the blueprint you can never change it. Because
identifiers are permanent and unique within your tenant, you can use them to programmatically
interact with blueprints and to create property bindings.
The identifier field automatically populates based on the name you entered.
5 Enter Golden Standard CentOS machine configuration in the Description text box.
6 Configure a lease range for users to choose from by entering 1 in the Minimum text box and 30 in
the Maximum text box.
7 Click OK.
What to do next
You drag a vSphere machine component onto the canvas and configure it to clone the CentOS template
you created in vSphere.
Scenario: Configure General Details for Your Rainpole Machine Component
Using your IaaS architect privileges, you drag a vSphere machine component onto the design canvas and
configure the general details for machines provisioned by using your blueprint.
Only IaaS architects are allowed to configure machine components. Application and Software architects
are only allowed to use machine components by reusing the published machine blueprints that you
create.
Procedure
1 Click the Machine Types category in the left navigation pane.
Machine component types appear in the lower panel.
2 Drag and drop a vSphere machine component onto the canvas.
3 Enter Golden Standard CentOS Machine in the Description text box.
4 Select Use group default from the Machine prefix drop-down menu.
If you plan to import these blueprints into your other environments, selecting the group default instead
of the specific Rainpole prefix prevents you from configuring your blueprint to work with a machine
prefix that might not be available.
What to do next
You configure the machine component to clone machines from the CentOS template you created.
Configuring vRealize Automation
VMware, Inc. 391