There is a new training course available at Pluralsight with as a topic What's new in vSphere 6.5. The author is Josh Coen (@joshcoen), a VCDX certified, cloud architect, working for Sirius Computer Solutions, a national systems integrator. Josh has been working in the industry for 15 years, specifically with virtualization and storage.
Readers of our website know that vSphere 6.5 is a large topic. To become VCP certified becomes harder and harder for folks that start with VMware certification process. Good quality courses from Pluralsight are a good investment when learning towards VCP exams. I can confirm from my own experience as I used those resources to pass my past VCPs and VCAPs.
Pluralsight allows you to get a subscription to learn at your own pace.
If after the learning process has finished, and you passed your exam, you can cancel anytime. It is a monthly subscription plan, which you can get details here. There is 10 days free trial (then $29/month).
Let's see what Josh Coen says about the course.
Quote:
With each new release of vSphere, both major and minor releases, existing features are enhanced, new features are released, and trying to keep up with all of it can be challenging, especially during the major release cycles. In this course, What's New in vSphere 6.5, you'll be introduced and walked through all the major enhancements and features to vSphere. First, you'll learn about the new features in vCenter and VMware HA and DRS, both of which bring major improvements. Next you'll discover what's new and exciting with vSphere Storage, which include enhancements made to vSAN. Finally, you'll learn about what's new with VMware Update Manager and vSphere Security, both bringing long awaited feature requests into fruition. Once you complete the course, you'll be completely up-to-speed on all major features introduced and enhanced in vSphere 6.5.
Screenshot from the Pluralsight website.
From my own experience so far, with vSphere 6.5 I can recommend several posts where I documented things I've done in the lab.
I proceeded and tested several different migration methods to migrate vCenter server to the latest release (note you can't migrate vCenter 6.5 to VCSA 6.5, know that…). I also migrated my ESXi hosts running VMware VSAN. I tried different migration methods for those ESXi hosts and documented the steps.
But the lab got migrated to vSphere 6.5 with VCSA 6.5 (Photon OS). Part of it is also VUM now, so the All-In-one package is quite sweet.
There were problems to find good driver/firmware combination for my x710-DA2 10Gb NICs, but finally, the latest driver and latest firmware with uninstalling the stocked VIB from the VMware ESXi 6.5 iso did the trick.
vCenter server:
- How to reset root password in vCenter Server Appliance 6.5
- How to reset Single Sign-On (SSO) password in vSphere
- How to patch VMware VCSA 6.5 via ISO patch downloaded from VMware Patch Portal
- How to patch VMware vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) from Offline Depot ZIP file
VMware ESXi:
- How to Upgrade ESXi 6.0 to 6.5 via CLI [On Line]
- How to Upgrade ESXi 6.0 to 6.5 via ISO
- How to upgrade ESXi 6.0 to ESXi 6.5 via Offline Bundle
- How to upgrade an ESXi 6.0 to ESXi 6.5 via VMware Update Manager
- How to create a USB media with ESXi 6.5 Installation
Tips:
- How to reset root password in vCenter Server Appliance 6.5
- How to reset Single Sign-On (SSO) password in vSphere
- How To Reset ESXi Root Password via Microsoft AD
Wrap-up:
VMware technologies are still the mainstream when it comes to data center virtualization. VMware Virtual SAN is gaining momentum (recent stats showed over 7000 VSAN customers) as it's simplicity in management, together with good performance allow to take the benefit for predictable performance at scale.
VMware and IT administrators need to master those technologies to become more performant in their jobs. as a result, the knowledge is evolving with every release of VMware vSphere. The current release of vSphere is no different. Tons of new features added.
Only now we can see the backup/replication and monitoring products to catch up and become compatible. The adoption of the new release of vSphere isn't fast and it's normal as one of the politics for the upgrade is to wait for “Update 1” service pack. The latest release of vCenter server is labeled vCenter server 6.5b so it is already the second patch after the initial vSphere release last fall.
More posts from ESX Virtualization
- How to use VMware IOInsight – Free IO Testing Tool
- What is VMware Storage DRS (SDRS)?
- What is VMware DRS (Distributed Resource Scheduler)?
- What is VMware Orchestrated Restart?
Stay tuned through RSS, and social media channels (Twitter, FB, YouTube)
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Andy says
Hi,
I have been follow your blog since vsphere 5.5
You shown the specs for a home lab to study.
2hosts and a Openfiler NAS
But now all seem to be unusable. I was able to upgraded vCenter 5.5 to 6.0 then 6.5U1. But when upgrade the ESXi 6.5U1. It sais incompatible! Very sad ! I think my setup will no more usable to learn ! Have you got any followers same issues? Do you have a solution other than upgrade our hardware?
Thank for your blog, it helps me a lot. By the way i m registered to Pluralsigh for 1 yr.
Many thank