vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1 | 06 SEP 2022 Check for additions and updates to these release notes. |
vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1 | 06 SEP 2022 Check for additions and updates to these release notes. |
VMware vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1| 06 SEP 2022
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Updates made to this document:
Date |
Description of update |
Type |
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09/06/2022 |
Initial publishing. |
vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1 includes new functionality and fixed issues.
VRealize Orchestrator now accepts certificates from vRealize Automation and vSphere that are signed by a trusted certificate authority (CA).
vRealize Orchestrator can now accept updated certificates from vRealize Automation and vSphere that are signed by a trusted CA. In previous releases, changing certificates required a reconfiguration in vRealize Orchestrator but now users can enable a system property through which vRealize Orchestrator can use a certification path validation algorithm. This enables vRealize Orchestrator to accept updated certificates without requiring reconfiguration. This change streamlines authentication and reduces maintenance as certificates in your vRealize Orchestrator deployment are rotated and updated. For information on the certificate validation algorithm, see Enabling the Certificate Path Validation Algorithm.
The vRealize Orchestrator Appliance is a VMware Photon OS-based appliance distributed as an OVA file. It is prebuilt and preconfigured with an internal PostgreSQL database, and it can be deployed with vCenter Server 6.0 or later.
The vRealize Orchestrator Appliance is a fast, easy to use, and more affordable way to integrate the VMware cloud stack, including vRealize Automation and vCenter Server, with your IT processes and environment.
For instructions about deploying the vRealize Orchestrator Appliance, see Download and Deploy the vRealize Orchestrator Appliance.
For information about configuring the vRealize Orchestrator Appliance server, see Configuring a Standalone vRealize Orchestrator Server.
You can upgrade a standalone or clustered vRealize Orchestrator 8.x deployment to the latest product version by using a mounted ISO image.
For more information about upgrading the vRealize Orchestrator Appliance, see Upgrading vRealize Orchestrator.
You can migrate a standalone vRealize Orchestrator instance authenticated with vSphere or vRealize Automation to vRealize Orchestrator 8.x. Product versions of vRealize Orchestrator 7.x supported for migration include versions 7.3 to 7.6. The migration of clustered vRealize Orchestrator 7.x deployments is not supported.
For more information about migrating the vRealize Orchestrator Appliance, see Migrating vRealize Orchestrator.
The following plug-ins are installed by default with vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1:
vRealize Orchestrator vCenter Server Plug-In 7.0.0
vRealize Orchestrator Mail Plug-In 8.0.1
vRealize Orchestrator SQL Plug-In 1.2.1
vRealize Orchestrator SSH Plug-In 7.6.0
vRealize Orchestrator SOAP Plug-In 2.0.6
vRealize Orchestrator HTTP-REST Plug-In 2.5.0
vRealize Orchestrator Plug-In for Microsoft Active Directory 3.0.13
vRealize Orchestrator AMQP Plug-In 1.0.6
vRealize Orchestrator SNMP Plug-In 1.0.5
vRealize Orchestrator PowerShell Plug-In 1.0.20
vRealize Orchestrator Multi-Node Plug-In 8.9.1
vRealize Orchestrator Dynamic Types 1.3.6
vRealize Orchestrator vCloud Suite API (vAPI) Plug-In 7.5.2
VMware vSphere Update Manager Plug-in 7.0.0
VRealize Orchestrator Auto Deploy Plug-in 7.0.0
Features and issues from earlier releases of vRealize Orchestrator are described in the release notes for each release. To review release notes for earlier releases of vRealize Orchestrator, click one of the following links:
The Cloud Services plug-in used by vRealize Orchestrator deployments in vRealize Automation Cloud is removed.
The Cloud Services plug-in is obsolete following the introduction of vRealize Automation plug-in. Consider using the vRealize Automation plug-in for all workloads to vRealize Automation Cloud. Workflow runs and actions will begin to fail if they are still using the Cloud Services plug-in after its removal.
The REST plug-in keeps connections open for too long.
In some cases, the REST plug-in keeps connections open for longer than expected.
After upgrading to vRealize Orchestrator 8.5.1-8.9, some previously working requests to the REST plug-in might start to fail.
Failed requests to the REST plug-in can result in 400 (bad request), 401 (unauthorized), or 403 (unauthenticated) status code messages. This issue is resolved by upgrading to vRealize Orchestrator 8.9.1 or later. You can also resolve the issue by upgrading the REST plug-in itself to the plug-in version released with vRealize Orchesrator 8.9.1 or later.
This section contains previously known issues (known issues remaining from earlier releases of vRealize Orchestrator that still exist in the product).
The Storage VSAN workflows of the vCenter Server plug-in do not support adding Solid-State Drive (SSD) disks to an ESXi host.
The Add disks to disk group and Remove disks from disk groups workflows do not support adding SSD disks as capacity disks to ESXi hosts.
No workaround.
Problems handling non-ASCII characters in certain contexts.
Using non-ASCII characters in input parameters results in incorrect behavior in the following situations:
If you run the SCP put or SCP get workflows from the SSH folder on a file with a name that contains non-ASCII characters, the workflow runs but the name of the resulting file on the destination machine is unreadable.
If you try to insert non-ASCII characters into variable names, the characters do not appear. This issue occurs for workflow variables and action variables.
No workaround.
The SSH plug-in encounters firewall connectivity issues.
The SSH plug-in cannot connect to a Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance (ASA) firewall.
Workaround: The SSH plug-in for vRealize Orchestrator 7.1 does not support connectivity to a Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance (ASA) firewall.
If you experience issues connecting to a SOAP or a REST host, or importing a certificate, you might have to explicitly enable certain versions of SSL or TLS.
For information about this issue, see the Java Secure Socket Extension (JSSE) Reference Guide.
Workaround: For information about explicitly enabling SSLv3 and TLSv1 for outgoing HTTPS connections, see How to enable TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2 for outgoing HTTPS connections in vRO 6.0.x (KB 2144316).
The SOAP plug-in cannot connect through an authenticated proxy server.
When attempting to run the Add a SOAP host workflow, you encounter an issue with the proxy server authentication.
Workaround: When running the workflow, use a proxy server that does not require authentication.
The vRealize Orchestrator authentication configuration might become invalid if the authentication provider certificate changes or regenerates.
When the SSL certificate of the vRealize Automation or vSphere instance that is configured as the authentication provider in Control Center is changed or regenerated, the vRealize Orchestrator authentication configuration becomes invalid, and the vRealize Orchestrator server cannot start.
Workaround: Import the new authentication provider certificate:
Log in to Control Center as root.
Click Certificates.
Click the Import on the Trusted Certificates tab.
Load the SSL certificate from a URL or a file.
Click Import.
During the installation of a plug-in in the vRealize Orchestrator Control Center, an error message appears.
When you install a plug-in from the Manage Plug-Ins page in Control Center, the following error message appears: Plug-in 'name_of_the_plug-in' (plug-in_file_name) is not compatible with the current platform version. Supported platform versions are 'names_of_the_supported_versions'. Clicking on the 'Install' button will install it anyway.
Workaround: You can safely ignore this error and proceed with the installation of the plug-in.
Adding values to vCenter Server data object properties of the Array type is not possible.
When vRealize Orchestrator runs scripts, the vCenter Server plug-in converts JavaScript arrays to Java arrays of a fixed size. As a result, you cannot add new values to vCenter Server data objects that take arrays as property values. You can create an object that takes an array as a property if you instantiate that object by passing it a pre-filled array. However, after you instantiate the object, you cannot add values to the array.
For example, the following code does not work:
var spec = new VcVirtualMachineConfigSpec();
spec.deviceChange = [];
spec.deviceChange[0] = new VcVirtualDeviceConfigSpec();
System.log(spec.deviceChange[0]);
In the above code, vRealize Orchestrator converts the empty spec.deviceChange JavaScript array into the fixed-size Java array VirtualDeviceConfigSpec[] before it calls setDeviceChange(). When calling spec.deviceChange[0] = new VcVirtualDeviceConfigSpec(), vRealize Orchestrator calls getDeviceChange() and the array remains a fixed, empty Java array. Calling spec.deviceChange.add() results in the same behavior.
Workaround: Declare the array as a local variable:
var spec = new VcVirtualMachineConfigSpec();
var deviceSpec = [];
deviceSpec[0] = new VcVirtualDeviceConfigSpec();
spec.deviceChange = deviceSpec;
System.log(spec.deviceChange[0]);