6.2

Table Of Contents
n
vRealize Automation Infrastructure as a Service
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) enables the rapid modeling and provisioning of servers and
desktops across virtual and physical, private and public, or hybrid cloud infrastructures.
VMware Identity Appliance
Identity Appliance is a preconfigured virtual appliance that provides single sign-on (SSO) capabilities for
the vRealize Automation environment.
You can use the Identity Appliance SSO provided with vRealize Automation or some versions of the SSO
provided with vSphere. For information about supported versions, see vRealize Automation Support
Matrix for this release available from https://www.vmware.com/support/pubs/vcac-pubs.html.
The Identity Appliance is delivered as an open virtualization format (OVF) template. The system
administrator deploys the virtual appliance to the existing virtualization infrastructure.
SSO is an authentication broker and security token exchange that interacts with the enterprise identity
store, Active Directory or OpenLDAP, to authenticate users. A system administrator configures SSO
settings to provide access to the Identity Appliance console.
VMware vRealize Appliance
The vRealize Appliance is a preconfigured virtual appliance that deploys the vRealize Automation server.
vRealize Automation is delivered as an open virtualization format (OVF) template. The system
administrator deploys the virtual appliance to an existing virtualized infrastructure.
The server includes the vRealize Appliance console, which provides a single portal for self-service
provisioning and management of cloud services, authoring, administration, and governance.
Appliance Database
During deployment of the virtual appliances, the Appliance Database is created automatically on the first
vRealize Appliance. A replica database can be installed on a second vRealize Appliance to create a high-
availability environment.
vRealize Automation Infrastructure as a Service
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) enables the rapid modeling and provisioning of servers and desktops
across virtual and physical, private and public, or hybrid cloud infrastructures.
The system administrator installs IaaS components on a Windows machine, virtual or physical. IaaS
capabilities are then available from the Infrastructure tab on the user interface console. IaaS has several
components that you can install in a custom configuration to meet the needs of your organization.
Installation and Configuration
VMware, Inc. 12