7.4

Table Of Contents
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Source port - Select the ANY option, enter a valid port or port range, or specify a valid property
binding.
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Destination port - Select the ANY option, enter a valid port or port range, or specify a valid
property binding.
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Protocol - Enter any valid NSX-supported protocol or select the TCP, UDP, or ANY option.
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Description - Enter a brief description of what the NAT rule is designed to do.
10 Click Finish to save the blueprint as draft or continue configuring the blueprint.
What to do next
You can continue configuring network settings by adding additional network components and by selecting
settings in the Network tab of a vSphere machine component in the design canvas.
Using Load Balancer Components in the Design Canvas
You can add one or more on-demand NSX load balancer components to the design canvas to configure
vSphere machine component settings in the blueprint.
The network and security component settings that you add to the design canvas are derived from your
NSX configuration and require that you have run data collection for the NSX inventory for vSphere
clusters. Network and security components are specific to NSX and are available for use with vSphere
machine components only. For information about configuring NSX, see NSX Administration Guide.
The following rules apply to load balancer pools and VIP network settings in the blueprint.
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If the pool network profile is NAT, the VIP network profile can be part of the NAT network profile.
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If the pool network profile is routed, the VIP network profile can only be on the same routed network.
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If the pool network profile is external, the VIP network profile can only be the same external network
profile.
Each load balancer component can have multiple virtual servers, which are also referred to as load
balancer services. Each virtual server in the load balancer component has one port and protocol. For
example, you can load balance an HTTP service or HTTPS service. A load balancer can have multiple
services that it is load balancing.
The NSX Edge is the network device that contains the load balancer virtual servers. While you can have
more than one load balancer component in a blueprint, when you provision the deployment, the virtual
servers defined in each load balancer component are contained in a single NSX Edge.
If a blueprint contains one or more load balancers and app isolation is enabled for the blueprint, the load
balancer VIPs are added to the app isolation security group as an IPSet. If a blueprints contains an on-
demand security group that is associated to a machine tier that is also associated to a load balancer, the
on-demand security group includes the machine tier and the IPSet with the load balancer VIP.
You can reconfigure load balancer settings in an existing deployment to add, edit, or remove virtual
servers. For information, see Reconfigure a Load Balancer in a Deployment.
Configuring vRealize Automation
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