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Table Of Contents
Manage ESXi
certificates
In vSphere 6.0 and later, the VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA)
provisions each ESXi host with a signed certificate that has VMCA as the
root certificate authority by default. If company policy requires it, you can
replace the existing certificates with certificates that are signed by a third-
party or an enterprise CA.
See Certificate Management for ESXi Hosts.
Consider Smart card
authentication
Starting with vSphere 6.0, ESXi supports the use of smart card
authentication instead of user name and password authentication. For
additional security, you can configure smart card authentication. Two-factor
authentication is also supported for vCenter Server.
See Configuring Smart Card Authentication for ESXi.
Consider ESXi account
lockout
Starting with vSphere 6.0, account locking is supported for access through
SSH and through the vSphere Web Services SDK. By default, a maximum
of 10 failed attempts is allowed before the account is locked. The account is
unlocked after two minutes by default.
Note The Direct Console Interface (DCUI) and the ESXi Shell do not
support account lockout.
See ESXi Passwords and Account Lockout.
Security considerations for standalone hosts are similar, though the management tasks might differ. See
the vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client documentation.
Securing vCenter Server Systems and Associated Services
Your vCenter Server system and associated services are protected by authentication through vCenter
Single Sign-On and by authorization through the vCenter Server permissions model. You can modify the
default behavior, and you can take additional steps to limit access to your environment.
As you protect your vSphere environment, consider that all services that are associated with the
vCenter Server instances must be protected. In some environments, you might protect several
vCenter Server instances and one or more Platform Services Controller instances.
Harden all vCenter host
machines
The first step in protecting your vCenter environment is hardening each
machine on which vCenter Server or an associated service runs. Similar
considerations apply to a physical machine or a virtual machine. Always
install the latest security patches for your operating system and follow
industry standard best practices to protect the host machine.
Learn about the
vCenter certificate
model
By default, the VMware Certificate Authority provisions each ESXi host,
each machine in the environment, and each solution user with a certificate
signed by VMCA. The environment works out of the box, but if company
policy requires it, you can change the default behavior. See the Platform
Services Controller Administration documentation for details.
vSphere Security
VMware, Inc. 11