7.4

Table Of Contents
2 Select the network traffic protocol in the Protocol drop-down menu to use for load balancing the
virtual server.
The protocol options are HTTP, HTTPS, TCP, and UDP.
3 Enter a port value in the Port text box.
The selected protocol determines the default port setting.
Protocol Default port
HTTP 80
HTTPS 443
TCP 8080
UDP no default
The HTTP, HTTPS, and TCP protocols can share a port with UDP. For example, if service 1 uses
TCP, HTTP, or HTTPS on port 80, service 2 can use UDP on port 80. If service 1 uses UDP on port
80 though, service 2 cannot use UDP on port 80.
4 (Optional) Enter a description for the virtual server component.
5 Select one of the Settings options.
n
Use default value for all other settings
Accept all other default settings. Click OK to finish the load balancer component definition and
continue working in the blueprint.
You can display the defaults by clicking Customize and examining the additional tab options. If
the default settings are acceptable, click Use default value for all other settings on the General
tab.
n
Customize
Configure the load balancer component with additional settings, for example to define a different
protocol for health monitoring or a different port for monitoring member traffic.
Additional tabs appear that allow you to add customized settings.
If you selected Use default value for all other settings and clicked OK you are done and can
continue to define or edit your blueprint in the design canvas. If you selected Customize, continue to
the step.
6 Click the Distribution tab and proceed to the Define Virtual Server Distribution Settings topic to
continue defining the virtual server in the NSX load balancer component.
Define Virtual Server Distribution Settings
By selecting the Customize option on the General tab, you can specify information about the pool
members such as the port on which the members receive traffic, the protocol type that the NSX load
balancer can use for accessing that port, the algorithm used for load balancing, and persistence settings.
A pool represents a cluster of machines that are being load balanced. A pool member represents one
machine in that cluster.
Configuring vRealize Automation
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