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Table Of Contents
If you manage hosts with a scripting interface or API, do not target the host
directly. Instead, target the vCenter Server system that manages the host
and specify the host name.
Use DCUI only for
troubleshooting
Access the host from the DCUI or the ESXi Shell as the root user only for
troubleshooting. Use one of the GUI clients, or one of the VMware CLIs or
APIs to administer your ESXi hosts. If you use the ESXi Shell or SSH, limit
the accounts that have access and set timeouts.
Use only VMware
sources to upgrade
ESXi components
The host runs several third-party packages to support management
interfaces or tasks that you must perform. VMware only supports upgrades
to these packages that come from a VMware source. If you use a download
or patch from another source, you might compromise management
interface security or functions. Check third-party vendor sites and the
VMware knowledge base for security alerts.
Note Follow the VMware security advisories at http://www.vmware.com/security/.
Configure ESXi Hosts with Host Profiles
Host profiles allow you to set up standard configurations for your ESXi hosts and automate compliance to
these configuration settings. Host profiles allow you to control many aspects of host configuration
including memory, storage, networking, and so on.
You can configure host profiles for a reference host from the vSphere Web Client and apply the host
profile to all hosts that share the characteristics of the reference host. You can also use host profiles to
monitor hosts for host configuration changes. See the vSphere Host Profiles documentation.
You can attach the host profile to a cluster to apply it to all hosts in the cluster.
Procedure
1 Set up the reference host to specification and create a host profile.
2 Attach the profile to a host or cluster.
3 Apply the host profile of the reference host to other hosts or clusters.
Use Scripts to Manage Host Configuration Settings
In environments with many hosts, managing hosts with scripts is faster and less error prone than
managing the hosts from the vSphere Web Client.
vSphere Security
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