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Table Of Contents
4 Configure the TFTP server.
a Click the Configure tab.
b Click Download TFTP Boot Zip to download the TFTP configuration file and unzip the file
to the directory in which your TFTP server stores files.
c (Optional) To use a proxy server, click Add on the
Auto Deploy Runtime Summary
pane
and enter a proxy server URL in the text box.
Using reverse proxy servers can offload the requests made to the vSphere Auto Deploy
server.
5 Set up your DHCP server to point to the TFTP server on which the TFTP ZIP file is located.
a Specify the TFTP Server's IP address in DHCP option 66, frequently called next-server.
b Specify the boot filename, which is snponly64.efi.vmw-hardwired for UEFI or
undionly.kpxe.vmw-hardwired for BIOS in the DHCP option 67, frequently called boot-
filename.
6 Set each host you want to provision with vSphere Auto Deploy to network boot or PXE boot,
following the manufacturer's instructions.
7 (Optional) If you set up your environment to use Thumbprint mode, you can use your own
Certificate Authority (CA) by replacing the OpenSSL certificate rbd-ca.crt and the OpenSSL
private key rbd-ca.key with your own certificate and key file.
The files are in /etc/vmware-rbd/ssl/.
By default, vCenter Server uses VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA).
Results
When you start an ESXi host that is set up for vSphere Auto Deploy, the host contacts the DHCP
server and is directed to the vSphere Auto Deploy server, which provisions the host with the
image profile specified in the active rule set.
What to do next
n You can change the default configuration properties of the Auto Deploy Service. For more
information, see "Configuring vCenter Server" in the
vCenter Server and Host Management
documentation.
n You can change the default configuration properties of the Image Builder Service. For more
information, see "Configuring vCenter Server" in the
vCenter Server and Host Management
documentation.
n Define a rule that assigns an image profile and optional host profile, host location, or script
bundle to the host. For Managing vSphere Auto Deploy with PowerCLI cmdlets, see the
Managing vSphere Auto Deploy with PowerCLI Cmdlets section. For managing vSphere Auto
Deploy with the vSphere Client, see the Managing vSphere Auto Deploy with the vSphere
Client section.
VMware ESXi Installation and Setup
VMware, Inc. 126