The vCenter Server design includes the design for all the vCenter Server instances. For this design, determine the number of instances, their sizes, networking configuration, vSphere cluster layout, redundancy, and security configuration.
A vCenter Server deployment can consist of two or more vCenter Server instances according to the scale, number of VMs, and continuity requirements for your environment.
You must protect the vCenter Server system as it is the central point of management and monitoring. You can protect vCenter Server according to the maximum downtime tolerated. Use the following methods to protect the vCenter Server instances:
Automated protection using vSphere HA
Automated protection using vCenter Server HA
vCenter Server Sizing
You can size the resources and storage for the Management vCenter Server Appliance and the Compute vCenter Server Appliance according to the expected number of VMs in the environment.
Attribute |
Specification |
---|---|
Appliance Size |
Small (up to 100 hosts or 1000 VMs) |
Number of vCPUs |
4 |
Memory |
19 GB |
Disk Space |
528 GB |
Attribute |
Specification |
---|---|
Appliance Size |
Large (up to 1,000 hosts or 10,000 VMs) |
Number of vCPUs |
16 |
Memory |
37 GB |
Disk Space |
1,113 GB |
TLS Certificates in vCenter Server
By default, vSphere uses TLS/SSL certificates that are signed by VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA). These certificates are not trusted by end-user devices or browsers.
As a security best practice, replace at least all user-facing certificates with certificates that are signed by a third-party or enterprise Certificate Authority (CA).
Design Decision |
Design Justification |
Design Implication |
---|---|---|
Deploy two vCenter Server systems with embedded Platform Services Controllers .
|
|
Requires licenses for each vCenter Server instance. |
Protect all vCenter Servers by using vSphere HA. |
Supports the availability objectives for vCenter Server without the required manual intervention during a failure event. |
vCenter Server becomes unavailable during the vSphere HA failover. |
Replace the vCenter Server machine certificate with a certificate signed by a third-party Public Key Infrastructure. |
|
Replacing and managing certificates is an operational overhead. |
Use an SHA-2 or higher algorithm when signing certificates. |
The SHA-1 algorithm is considered less secure and is deprecated. |
Not all certificate authorities support SHA-2. |