7.4

Table Of Contents
When you export a blueprint from one vRealize Automation instance tenant into another, the property
group information defined for that blueprint is not recognized for the imported blueprint unless the
property group already exists in the target tenant instance. For example, if you import a blueprint that
contains a property group named mica1, the mica1 property group is not present in the imported blueprint
unless the mica1 property group already exists in the vRealize Automation instance in which you import
the blueprint. To avoid losing property group information when exporting a blueprint from one
vRealize Automation instance to another, use vRealize CloudClient to create an export package zip file
that contains the property group and import that package zip file into the target tenant before you import
the blueprint. For more information about using vRealize CloudClient to list, package, export, and import
property groups, as well as other vRealize Automation items, see the VMware Developer Center at
https://developercenter.vmware.com/tool/cloudclient.
Table 363. Choosing Your Import and Export Tool
Tool More information
vRealize CloudClient See the vRealize CloudClient page on the VMware
code.vmware.com site at
https://developercenter.vmware.com/tool/cloudclient.
vRealize Automation REST API See API documentation in the VMware API Explorer for
vRealize Automation at https://code.vmware.com/apis/vrealize-
automation.
Note When exporting and importing blueprints programmatically across vRealize Automation
deployments, for example from a test to a production environment or from one organization to another, it
is important to recognize that clone template data is included in the package. When you import the
blueprint package, default settings are populated based on information in the package. For example, if
you export and then import a blueprint that was created using a clone-style workflow, and the template
from which that clone data was derived does not exist in an endpoint in the vRealize Automation
deployment in which you import the blueprint, some imported blueprint settings are not applicable for that
deployment.
Scenario: Importing the Dukes Bank for vSphere Sample Application and
Configuring for Your Environment
As an IT professional evaluating or learning vRealize Automation, you want to import a robust sample
application into your vRealize Automation instance so you can quickly explore the available functionality
and determine how you might build vRealize Automation blueprints that suit the needs of your
organization.
Prerequisites
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Prepare a CentOS 6.x Linux reference machine, convert it to a template, and create a customization
specification. See Scenario: Prepare for Importing the Dukes Bank for vSphere Sample Application
Blueprint.
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Create an external network profile to provide a gateway and a range of IP addresses. See Create an
External Network Profile by Using A Third-Party IPAM Provider.
Configuring vRealize Automation
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