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Table Of Contents
vSphere Auto Deploy takes advantage of the iPXE infrastructure and PXE booting with legacy
BIOS firmware is possible only over IPv4. If the hosts that you want to provision with vSphere Auto
Deploy are with legacy BIOS, the vSphere Auto Deploy server must have an IPv4 address. PXE
booting with UEFI firmware is possible with either IPv4 or IPv6.
Procedure
1 Install the TFTP Server
To set up a vSphere Auto Deploy infrastructure, you must install a TFTP server in your
environment. vSphere Auto Deploy relies on a TFTP server for sending a boot image to the
hosts that it provisions.
2 Install PowerCLI
Before you can manage vSphere Auto Deploy with rules that you create with PowerCLI
cmdlets, you must install PowerCLI.
3 Prepare the vSphere Auto Deploy Target Hosts
You must configure the BIOS settings of the four hosts and reconfirm the MAC address of
the primary network device to prepare the target hosts for provisioning with vSphere Auto
Deploy.
4 Prepare the DHCP Server for vSphere Auto Deploy Provisioning
When you prepare the vSphere Auto Deploy target hosts, you must set up the DHCP server
in this scenario to serve each target host with an iPXE binary.
5 Configure the vSphere Auto Deploy and TFTP Environment in the vSphere Client
After you prepare the DHCP server, you must start the vSphere Auto Deploy vCenter Server
service and configure the TFTP server. You must download a TFTP ZIP file from your vSphere
Auto Deploy server. The customized FTP server serves the boot images that vSphere Auto
Deploy provides.
6 Prepare the ESXi Software Depot and Write a Rule
After you configure the vSphere Auto Deploy infrastructure, you must add an ESXi software
depot, specify an image profile, write a rule, and add it to the active rule set.
7 Provision the First Host with vSphere Auto Deploy
After creating a rule and adding it to the active rule set, you can provision the first host and
check its vCenter Server location to complete verification of the image provisioning of your
setup.
8 Extract and Configure a Host Profile from the Reference Host
After provisioning the first host, you can extract and configure a host profile that can be
used to apply the same configuration to other target hosts. Configuration that differs for
different hosts, such as a static IP address, can be managed through the host customization
mechanism.
VMware ESXi Installation and Setup
VMware, Inc. 203