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Table Of Contents
VMware Tools Manage the power controls for the virtual machine and run VMware Tools
scripts. You can also upgrade VMware Tools during power cycling and
synchronize guest time with the host.
Virtualization Based
Security (VBS)
Enable VBS to provide an additional level of protection to the virtual
machine. VBS is available on the latest Windows OS versions. For more
information, see the vSphere Security documentation.
Boot Options Set the boot delay when powering on virtual machines or to force BIOS
setup and configure failed boot recovery.
Advanced Options Disable acceleration and enable logging, configure debugging and
statistics, and change the swap file location. You can also change the
latency sensitivity and add configuration parameters.
Fibre Channel NPIV Control virtual machine access to LUNs on a per-virtual machine basis. N-
port ID virtualization (NPIV) provides the ability to share a single physical
Fibre Channel HBA port among multiple virtual ports, each with unique
identifiers.
vApp Options Use the vSphere Web Client to enable or disable vApp functionality. When
you select the checkbox, you can view and edit vApp properties, vApp
Deployment options, and vApp Authoring options. For example, you can
configure an IP allocation policy or a network protocol profile for the vApp.
A vApp option that is specified at the level of a virtual machine overrides
the settings specified at the level of the vApp.
vSphere Web Client
All administrative functions are available through the vSphere Web Client.
The vSphere Web Client is a cross platform application that can connect only to vCenter Server. It has a
full range of administrative functionality and an extensible plug-in-based architecture. Typical users are
virtual infrastructure administrators, help desk, network operations center operators, and virtual machine
owners.
Users can use the vSphere Web Client to access vCenter Server through a Web browser. The
vSphere Web Client uses the VMware API to mediate the communication between the browser and the
vCenter Server.
Where to Go From Here
You must create, provision, and deploy your virtual machines before you can manage them.
To begin provisioning virtual machines, determine whether to create a single virtual machine and install
an operating system and VMware tools, work with templates and clones, or deploy virtual machines,
virtual appliances, or vApps stored in Open Virtual Machine Format (OVF).
vSphere Virtual Machine Administration
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