VMware vSphere® Integrated Containers 1.5.3 | 09 JUL 2019
Check for additions and updates to these release notes. |
What's in the Release Notes
These release notes cover the following topics:
- About vSphere Integrated Containers
- What's New
- Localization
- Product Documentation
- Installation
- Compatibility
- Upgrading vSphere Integrated Containers
- Open Source Components
- Resolved Issues
- Known Issues
About vSphere Integrated Containers
vSphere Integrated Containers is delivered as an appliance, that comprises the following major components:
- VMware vSphere Integrated Containers Engine, a container runtime for vSphere that allows developers who are familiar with Docker to develop in containers and deploy them alongside traditional VM-based workloads on vSphere clusters. vSphere adminitrators can manage these workloads by using vSphere in a way that is familiar.
- vSphere Integrated Containers Plug-In for vSphere Client, that provides information about your vSphere Integrated Containers setup and allows you to deploy virtual container hosts directly from the vSphere Client.
- VMware vSphere Integrated Containers Registry (Harbor), an enterprise-class container registry server that stores and distributes container images. vSphere Integrated Containers Registry extends the Docker Distribution open source project by adding the functionalities that an enterprise requires, such as security, identity and management.
- VMware vSphere Integrated Containers Management Portal, a container management portal that provides a UI for DevOps teams to provision and manage containers, including retrieving stats and info about container instances. Cloud administrators can manage container hosts and apply governance to their usage, including capacity quotas and approval workflows. When integrated with vRealize Automation, more advanced capabilities become available, such as deployment blueprints and enterprise-grade Containers-as-a-Service.
vSphere Integrated Containers enables VMware customers to deliver a production-ready container solution to their developers and DevOps teams. By leveraging their existing SDDC, customers can run container-based applications alongside existing virtual machine based workloads in production without having to build out a separate, specialized container infrastructure stack. As an added benefit for customers and partners, vSphere Integrated Containers is modular. So, for example, if your organization already has a container registry in production, you can use that registry with vSphere Integrated Containers Engine and vSphere Integrated Containers Management Portal.
What's New
vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3 includes the following changes:
- Support for vCenter Server versions 6.7 up to and including 6.7 update 2. Read more.
- Support for NSX-T Data Center version 2.4. Read more.
- New option to reconfigure the appliance settings to change the TLS certificates after you have deployed it. Read more.
- Support for FQDN of the old version of the appliance in the upgrade script. Read more.
- Option to configure the path to an existing
ca.pem
file in thevic-machine configure
command. Read more. - Option to forward appliance logs to Syslog servers. Read more.
- Option to roll back the VCH configuration changes to the previous settings. Read more.
- The
--registry-ca
option of the thevic-machine configure
command replaces certificates instead of just adding them. Read more. - Increases the length of the root password to 128 characters. Read more.
- Option to click on the vSphere Integrated Containers appliance IP address in the vSphere Integrated Containers Summary tab to go to the vSphere Integrated Containers Getting Started page. Read more.
Localization
vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3 is only available in English.
Product Documentation
The vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3 documentation includes the following publications:
- Overview of vSphere Integrated Containers
- vSphere Integrated Containers for vSphere Administrators
- vSphere Integrated Containers Management Portal Administration
- Using vSphere Integrated Containers as a DevOps Administrator, Developer, or Viewer
- Developing Applications with vSphere Integrated Containers
Installation
For information about installing vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3, see Installing vSphere Integrated Containers.
Compatibility
For information about compatibility, see Interoperability of vSphere Integrated Containers with Other VMware Software in Install, Deploy, and Maintain the vSphere Integrated Containers Infrastructure and the VMware Product Interoperability Matrixes.
Upgrading vSphere Integrated Containers
For information about upgrading to vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3, see Upgrading vSphere Integrated Containers.
Open Source Components
The vSphere Integrated Containers components are licensed under Apache 2 with additional licenses denoted within the vSphere Integrated Containers appliance, Engine, Registry, Management Portal, and vSphere Client plug-in open source repositories.
Resolved Issues
For the lists of issues that have been resolved in vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3, see the Github open-source project pages for each component.
- Resolved Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Appliance 1.5.3
- Resolved Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Engine 1.5.3
- Resolved Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Management Portal 1.5.3
- Resolved Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Registry 1.7.5
- Resolved Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Plug-In for vSphere Client 1.5.3
Known Issues
For the lists of known issues in vSphere Integrated Containers 1.5.3, see the Github open-source project pages for each component.
- Known Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Appliance 1.5.3
- Known Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Engine 1.5.3
- Known Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Management Portal 1.5.3
- Known Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Registry 1.7.5
- Known Issues in vSphere Integrated Containers Plug-In for vSphere Client 1.5.3