TheSaffaGeek

My ramblings about all things technical


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VCDX Spotlight: Jonathan Kemp

Name: Jonathan Kemp

Twitter Handle: @ActuallyVirtual

Blog URL: http://www.actuallyvirtual.co.uk

VCDX #: 100

How did you get into using VMware?

It all started about April 2008 when the company was looking to setup a brand new branch office. This was for about 120 people and my first design brief was “Can we do anything interesting with virtual desktops?” At that point I had only been with the company 6 months and my virtualisation experience consisted of a MS Virtual PC machine I used to test SMS packages. I did a quick search on virtual desktops and came across VMware’s VDI 2.5 solution. I was able to setup a small test lab using a couple of desktops and an old server running a virtual iSCSI san appliance. Up to that point the company had run entirely traditional desktops and server environments with local storage.

Having proven that it was possible, the first design was a bit of a stab in the dark as far as requirements were concerned. I was able to get the company to send me on the VI 3.5 Fast Track course, which was really well done with a great trainer and great facilities to do the exercises on. This really helped with improving the desktop design and migrating our datacentre over to virtualisation.

 

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

It was after I took the VCP 3 that I read about the VCDX certification. I made the decision then that I wanted to work towards that goal although I knew it would take some time.

I attended the vSphere 4 Design Workshop course to get a better understanding of the method that should be used to design infrastructures. At that point with the newly released VCAP certificates being made available I really began working towards the VCDX goal I had set. I took the VCAP-DCD first as the design course was still fairly fresh in my mind and the DCA was the exam I was dreading the most (and still do). Once I had both of these under my belt it was really down to finding the ideal design to use for the VCDX itself, which took a little while.

 

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

The whole journey took about 4 years, although in reality it was probably only the last two years that I was able to think of it as a possibility. I had read the blueprints for both the VCDX 3 and 4 and realised that I wasn’t going to be ready for 3 and needed a lot more practical experience for 4. I had got the pre-requisite certifications for VCDX 4 done by the end of 2011 and then it was down to choosing the right design to submit. This was the bit that took a bit of time as I wanted the submission to be as real a design as possible. Although a wholly fictitious design is possible, it is easier to defend decisions based on real requirements and constraints. Finally in August 2012 I had a design I felt was a good candidate with a few minor changes to cover the requirements in the blueprint. I spent about 3 weeks solidly working on completing the design documents to fit the requirements. I spent a lot of time reading the blogs of existing VCDX holders and the tips on the VMware site, trying to put all that advice into practice.

I submitted and defended the design at Barcelona in October 2012 and happily, along with seven others, received confirmation I had achieved VCDX about two weeks later.

 

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

Firstly go for it. The whole process is worth it.

Lots of research. Read the experiences of others who have already been through the process, there is a wealth of advice out there. Also read the advice tips given on the VMware site, especially the tips on what not to do.

Read the blueprint. Read it again and then again. Make certain your design covers the objectives, adding to your original design if necessary.

Plan your time and then possibly double it to allow for unforeseen problems.

Peer review. Get as many people to read through your documents as possible and I would say get a mix of technical experts and non technical people. Can someone with little or no experience understand your design and see why they would implement your design? You may be asking them to make a big investment.

Run some mock defences. Again I would say try to include someone who is not technical on the panel. A non technical person may well ask you to explain something that a technical person will take for granted. Try and keep to the real time limits so you get a feeling for how quickly it passes. Remember you have to defend all aspects of the design so, for example, why did you do X? Could you have done Y differently?

Print your documents out and proof read them, both by yourself and someone else. Get yourself a red pen and be ruthless.

Finally, if you have the opportunity, attend a VCDX boot camp. I attended the one in Barcelona two days before my defence and I can say it made a huge difference on the day.

 

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

Not much, knowing my own personality. I should have started the design submission documentation earlier and made time for a mock defence or two.

 

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it

The company, I think, is a little unsure of what it all means but my colleagues were certainly impressed. I am encouraging our other VCPs to begin the journey themselves and put the lessons I have learned into greater practice.

Was it worth it? Categorically yes. The process was, for me, more a personal goal rather than something I felt was professionally required. Had I not been successful at Barcelona then I would definitely have been back for another try.


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VCDX Spotlight: James Charter

Name: James Charter

Twitter Handle: @DavesRant

Current Employer: Long View Systems

VCDX #: 106

 

 

How did you get into using VMware?

I first saw VMware Workstation 4 and was really impressed with what you could do with it. When we first adopted ESX 2.5 at my workplace I was totally hooked, and within a couple years was working as a consultant in the virtualization team at my current employer.

 

 

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

A friend I have a lot of respect for was pursuing it and I thought it was an interesting challenge. I applied to the VCDX3 program and completed the enterprise admin and enterprise design exams, and started refining an existing design I had completed for a client.

 

 

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

A couple of years. I was planning to apply for a VCDX3 defense, but with a young family I was finding it very challenging to make the deadline, and put it on hold. Some friends asked why I hadn’t picked it back up, so at VMworld 2012 I took a deep breath and said I would submit an application to defend at Partner Exchange.

 

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

Support is really important, and your family needs to be behind you, it’s a lot of work and time away from them. Employer and peer support is incredibly important and makes a huge difference. I was fortunate on all three counts.

 

 

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

I would have followed a more structured preparation plan and started earlier. I can’t stress that one enough, have a structured plan with contingency and follow it – life gets busy.

 

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it?

My company has been extremely supportive and believes in the value of investing in advanced certifications and training. It was definitely worth it, and has helped me advance my design and consulting skills. For our consulting practice it has changed the way we approach designs and solutioning


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VCAP5-DCD Retake

This Monday I re-sat my VCAP5-DCD exam after having marginally failed it the first time in January this year. I wrote a fairly extensive blog posting about my opinions about the exam and the additional resources I planned to use. I would recommend people read that posting first if you haven’t as I still maintain 95% of the pieces I said and mentioned in there are true about the exam. This time I thankfully passed the exam and with not a bad score of 333 also.

 

Resources used:

 

For this attempt i did use a fair portion more resources and actually think I studied more this time than I did for my first attempt. I thought I would list the resources I used or re-used for this attempt and am planning on adding the resources mentioned here on my VCAP5-DCA & DCD Study Resources page if they aren’t mentioned on there already:

 

– I read the official VMware book Building a Virtual Datacenter to try help me get the holistic view and mentality you have to maintain during the build of a virtual datacenter and how every decision can have an impact on another portion of your environment and design. The book was really good and I would recommend it but I have to admit I did skip certain portions as I had covered them in books that had them covered much better and in more depth.

 

-I bought the kindle version of the new VMware vSphere Design book from Forbes Guthrie and Scott Lowe. I bought the kindle version as the paperback version wasn’t out in Europe for a while and my timeframes for studying were very tight. The book is utterly brilliant and covers both vSphere 5 and 5.1 and I would HIGHLY recommend it for the exam and anyone who works with VMware.

 

-As I stated I would, I read the  VMware press book Managing and Optimizing VMware vSphere Deployments by Harley Stagner and Sean Crookston which helped me gain more knowledge around all the portions of a design and the link each component in the design has. The main piece from this book that i really liked was the operational portions as you can’t do a design without having the end goal and plan of it being able to run for a long time after you have left (if you are a consultant like I am).

 

-The main thing I really focused on was going through the whole vSphere Design workshop course notes, lab guides and answers to the lab guides and made sure I understood every single portion and why certain decisions were made by VMware in the completed designs of the labs. If you haven’t been on the course I would beg management to put you on it as it covers every portion you need to know for the exam and gives some great tips for the exam (no I cant tell you what these are)

 

Exam experience:

I was more nervous for this attempt than my first attempt as I really wanted to pass it this time as with having a five week old little one my studying schedule took a knock and I actually postponed the exam for two week later from it’s initial date due to not getting through portions I wanted before the attempt.

 

Once I got into the exam and started making my way through the questions with each question I felt I had got correct or very close to correct i became more and more confident. I also think i managed my time a bit better this time and wasn’t as overwhelmed by what they were asking of me. Before the exam starts they tell you how many visio style questions you are going to get so I wrote down the numbers (1-6 for me) and marked them out after each one so that I knew how my time management was going. I did have two drag and drop questions in my last three questions which used up my time and meant i only had around 8 minutes left by the time I completed the last question. The result came up and very quickly and I was in shock that it stated congratulations and actually started feeling dizzy after not having been able to eat much before the exam due to feeling sick from nerves and not having drank much as I knew I couldn’t afford toilet breaks.

 

Tips:

 

For this attempt i came across and learnt a few tips for the exam which helped me with the visio style questions and allowed me to be sure portions were connected correctly.

 

-There is a scissors icon beside the bin in the right hand bottom corner that allows you to cut a connector/connection you have made in error without moving loads of portions across the page by trying to move the connection to the bin. I did this drag and drop mistake a few times in my first attempt and it really hurt me as it moved portions off the screen and so meant I had to redo pieces.

-Make sure connections have stuck to boxes by carefully trying to move the box and seeing if the connector follows. This is related to the piece above and is a good tip to make sure you have connected the boxes correctly. Also make sure you connect the correct portions together as I noticed once or twice I didn’t click the correct piece and so the pieces I meant to have connected were actually not connected so be careful where you click.

-Do practice designs at home on paint or visio or even word to allow yourself to visualise how you would do different visio style designs scenarios so that when you are in the exam and maybe see one of them you know what your final designs should look like.

 

Conclusion/what’s next:

 

So now that I have both my VCAP5-DCA and DCD I can start designing my VCDX infrastructure and submit the design for defence for the VCDX5 accreditation. I still need to do some soul searching and decide when I want to submit as it’s a serious amount of work to complete all the required documents and my planned design is only about 60% where I want it to be before submitting it so I’m estimating around 40 hours of work to get it all ready which isn’t easy to find with a 5 week old, a full time job as a consultant and my sanity maintained. I will most likely slowly start building my design and documents and submit for PEX early next year although I may be drawn to do it sooner or later.

 

For those looking to do either of the exams I would recommend starting right away and also booking a date for it so that you are pushed to get through everything, the exams are very challenging but there are amazing resources out there which will help you gain the knowledge to pass the exam and with loads of lab time and practicing you can pass them. Good luck to all those who are preparing or looking to do the exams and hopefully my resources page and this blog help you.

 

Gregg


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VCDX Spotlight: Simon Long

Name: Simon Long

Twitter Handle: @simonlong_

Blog URL: www.simonlong.co.uk

Current Employer: VMware

VCDX #: 105

 

 

How did you get into using VMware?

Around 5/6 years ago the company that I was working for at the time installed ESX 3.0 to use as part of their Dev/Test environment. The “VMware stuff” as we knew it then, was installed by a contractor as our team didn’t really know too much about it. Once the installation was complete, the contractor left and we were left to fend for ourselves. I nominated myself to look after the “VMware stuff”, and that’s how this love affair began.

 

 

 

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

It’s hard to put my finger on one thing. I think working closely with Frank Denneman during my time at VMware Professional Services certain contributed to me wanting to aim high.

I also like to make goals for myself and I made the VCDX one of those goals. However I didn’t put a time frame on it. I could have probably defended a lot earlier than I did, but I was never really completely ready for it until 2012.

 

 

 

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

 

It’s hard to say as I guess it includes VCP, VCAP exams as well. A lot of these exams I just took as and when I had time to take them, so there wasn’t a sense of, if I take the VCAP’s by this date, I can then submit for the VCDX. It just happened really. I had both VCAP’s, then one day I decided I was going to go for it.

 

 

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

Don’t be scared. A lot of people who talk about going for VCDX are reluctant because they have heard “It’s really scary and the panellists are after your blood” etc, but this really is not the truth. The panellists actually want you to pass.

Pick a design you have architected yourself, and that covers most of the areas of the Blueprint. If you use a design that is not completely yours, you may find it hard when asked question on those sections.

Know that design inside out (read every word). Know why you chose each feature, understand what each feature you chose does and understand why you didn’t choose the other features.

The technology is not the only focus in the VCDX. Make sure you fully understand and have documented; Risks, Constraints etc that affected your design.

And don’t be afraid to say you don’t know to something. The guys who are asking questions will know if you’re making it up or not.

 

 

 

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

Nothing. It went pretty smooth I thought. Smile

 

 

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it

My Company were pleased for me. No pay rise as yet….. 😉 But I think this is normal in the majority of companies.

I think it was worth it. It certainly improved me as an architect. I now have great attention to detail (when needed). This has come from the scrutinizing of my design over a period of months.

And if, in the future I decide to leave VMware, having VCDX #105 on my CV might improve my chances of securing another role.


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VCDX Spotlight: Chris Fendya

Name: Chris Fendya

Twitter Handle: @ChrisFendya

Current Employer: World Wide Technology www.wwt.com

VCDX #: 96

How did you get into using VMware?

I first started using VMware back in the GSX days when researching a way to save data center space for a global supplier to energy products I worked for. I remember hearing about this “vMotion” thing which pushed me to look into ESX. I built a small environment, staged the scenario, issued the vMotion command, and was hooked. I will never forget that moment and what followed by relaying the good news to our CIO. He promptly challenged me on what I just described to him. The demo date was set, I again built the scenario, and in a small conference room showed our CIO the power of vMotion. He just smiled and said “Continue forward and get this stuff in our data center!”. I haven’t stopped with VMware since that day and that was over eight years ago. It’s been an amazing adventure seeing VMware grow and watching the changes and impact it has made to all our lives and how we work.

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

I was challenged by an old boss to go after it a couple of years ago back when it was in its infancy. I began reading up on what all was required, the process, and reading others blog about their experience of the journey. Saying I was intimidated is an underestimate but the funny thing was I was inspired and challenged all at the same time.

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

My journey lasted a couple years. I did not pass my first defense. That first defense was an eye opening experience for me and drove me to go after it a second time. When I received notice I failed after my second defense, I had a range of emotions and for a long time decided the certification wasn’t for me. When VMware announced a final defense for VCDX4 at VMworld 2012, I had many within the community contact me and encourage me to give it another attempt. Had it not been for them, I don’t believe I would be writing this right now 😉

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

Take their time! It’s not a race to get the certification. Learn all you can about every aspect of an entire solution. Where the certification is obviously centered around VMware, it will challenge you on every aspect of a design and a total solution (Networking, Storage, Compute, Business impact, etc) and how each and every one of those relate to VMware and the end design. I found I was questioned on things I never thought of during my preparation and honestly, sometimes things I didn’t know. The panel isn’t there to make you look dumb or prove that they are smarter than you. They will help you through it as much as they can, so as much as it’s about challenging you on what you know, it’s also about your thought process and how you approach a problem and work through it.

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

I believe things happen for a reason so to say I would do it differently or have it happen differently…No. I obviously would’ve loved to pass on the first or even second try but not doing so had it’s own rewards 😉

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it?

I work for a pretty amazing company! Throughout the entire process they embraced my journey, encouraged me along the way, and in the end were extremely proud when I shared the good news. They wrote this blog article to celebrate the news which I was honored to have done.

I get the “Was it worth it” question a lot. Mostly from customers who have heard of the certification and want to know about it and my journey but also from others in the community. I always respond ABSOLUTELY! I learned an immense amount about designing solutions and myself as an individual. In addition and probably most important, I became a better Architect, Engineer, and Consultant. The people I met and interacted with throughout the entire process has been amazing… Many of those who I know will be a part of my career for a very long time!


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VCDX Spotlight: Shane White

Name: Shane White

Twitter Handle: @ausvmguy

Blog URL: none (yet)

Current Employer: Southern Cross Computer Systems

VCDX #: 95

How did you get into using VMware?

In 2007, I started playing with Workstation. In the 2nd half of that year, I completed a training program I had been on for a while. I had seen ESX 2.5 installed but didn’t know a lot about it. When I asked my employer what the options were for continued training and/or specialisation and virtualisation was an option, I elected to go down this road. I got my VCP3 in October of that year and had the opportunity to do nothing but VMware onsite for the next 3 years or so with one of our clients.

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

I have always liked a challenge. With the exposure and skills I obtained onsite, and the satisfaction I got from working with VMware technologies, I decided that attempting VCDX would be enjoyable, definitely challenging, but not unachievable.

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

If you count from the time I decided to go for it, just under 2 years. Due to my commitments onsite, I couldn’t spend large blocks of time on my design. I achieved both VCAP4 exams in Nov 2010 (4 days apart!). I started working up the design in late November 2010 and had my 1st defence attempt in Singapore in November 2011, which was unsuccessful. The feedback received from this defense and from a 2nd unsuccessful defense in Toronto in May 2012 was applied to a revised submission aimed for defense at VMworld in San Francisco in August 2012. On the 3rd attempt, I was successful!

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

I found it particularly valuable to have had practical experience working with a real environment. While a home lab is very useful as well, a real environment will encounter real design decisions and configuration issues that may not arise in a home environment.

Consider carefully the kind of design you are planning on submitting. My design was a totally fictitious one. My success shows that you can defend a fictitious design, but it is likely to be harder than if a real design is used.

Either way, read the blueprint and make sure you address ALL the criteria and that you know, not only what your design decisions are, but also understand why that choice was the most appropriate in your situation. This means having a good grasp on the business requirements that have a bearing on those decisions.

Don’t get discouraged if your 1st (or subsequent) attempts are unsuccessful. View it as an opportunity to improve. Achieving VCDX has been described as a journey, and the entire journey can be beneficial and bring satisfaction if you let it.

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

I’d read the blueprint more closely and more often! Apart from that, I wouldn’t do anything else differently. I enjoyed the whole experience and found the whole process immensely educational.

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it?

SCCS was definitely pleased with the successful defense.

As for me, the sense of satisfaction of achieving something significant is immense. The increased confidence when facing a situation is also noticeable.

Was it worth it? Absolutely. Even if I had decided not to reattempt, the process of developing the design, all the researching, and preparing for the defense and developing the presentation was of great benefit.


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VCDX Spotlight: Sachin Bhowan

Name: Sachin Bhowan

Twitter Handle: @sbhowan

Current Employer: VMXperts

VCDX #: 38

How did you get into using VMware?

My first use of VMware was back in 2004 when we were investigating bare metal recoveries for Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM) and were experimenting with WinPE and GSX. I was looking for a way to standardize the recovery hardware platform for recovery as at the time there was no bare metal recovery option for TSM. It was after that then I started exploring and testing the ESX platform for server workloads and with the onset of Version 3, as the cliché goes….rest became history!

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

An interesting question in that there are two reasons for this; the main reason was for the challenge to prove to myself that the solutions I was actively “preaching” and delivering on were on par and on the right track. The second reason was simply being at the right place at the right time as we were having a meeting with our VMware Partner Manager and our CEO was complaining about the lack of elitism within the VMware certification portfolio and then they announced the VCDX program. I was then “volunteered” to make this happen!

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

I started this journey in September 2008 and tried to track and get as much information as possible, however being in the geo that I was, the most helpful information I got was from the active blogs run by Duncan Epping, Rick Scherer, VCDX001, and twitter tips, as exam information and details were only given out after successful registrations. The process was also impacted by the fact that I had to take all my exams in Europe or the US as there was no authorized testing centre in South Africa at that time. Therefore I had to wait for exams to open as well as align them with the major VMware events to reduce costs. This also forced me to be prepared at very short notice when I was given the availability of the exams! That said I completed my defence in February 2010 giving a total time of about 18 months.

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

My advice is to be passionate about what you are doing and if you feel that doing the research and working out the solution interdependencies and limitations is mundane and tedious then this might not be the right track for you. Working towards the VCDX in my experience involved a lot of patience, dedication, passion and not to mention discipline as this is a method for working studiously and diligently on an everyday basis because not all solution requirements are the same. It also means investing a lot of your time over and above of your daily responsibilities and duties (work and family included); so commit for the long haul.

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

I do not think I would change much aside from the fact that with exams now available locally it would have meant a shorter timespan to get the accreditation.

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it?

Life for me has pretty much been the same since I achieved the VCDX accreditation and simply so because I chose for it to be that way as there were some tempting offers and I opted out for personal reasons. However I am now responsible for heading up a new business called VMXperts, that is a subsidiary of my former company Aptronics. (You can guess what platform this company’s focus will be). As for the response from my company everyone was simply elated and it also went well that I was the very first person in Africa to achieve this. This made their investment in the VCDX program a worthy one!


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VCDX Spotlight: Randy Stanley

Name: Randy Stanley

Twitter Handle: @randystanley

Blog URL: http://www.randystanley.com

Current Employer: IT Partners

VCDX #: 94

How did you get into using VMware?

In 2003 I was working for a small software development company managing their business applications and supporting their software development team. Initially we began utilizing VMware GSX Server for those simple use cases trying to consolidate and save on our hardware spend where ever we could. In support of the software development team we also deployed ESX in a lab environment for testing and development purposes only. A fairly common introduction and use case early on in the adoption of VMware solutions. Plus, vMotion was the coolest freakin’ thing I had ever seen.

It wasn’t until I re-entered the consulting field in 2007 that I really started to dive deep into the VMware products and they have been an integral part of every solution we sell and deploy. It was this exposure to the VMware technology that really allowed me to develop my abilities and deepen my experience. I also should say that a large draw for me was the large, friendly and helpful community that supported and shared knowledge around the VMware products; easily the best community with which to be associated.

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

For me the decision was twofold, first because I’ve had the great fortune of working with one of the best consultants I know in Doug Baer, VCDX #19 and second for the shear challenge of obtaining the certification. A natural, underlying part of the equation has always been my love of the technology and interest in understanding how it works at its core. In my current line of work, utilizing the skills and knowledge measured by the VCDX certification is highly relevant and in many ways a validation of those abilities.

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

It’s hard to say exactly when the journey started, as I had wanted to go after it for the last couple of years, but it seemed so far off and I never really got going. In May 2011, I started and then stopped my journey with a failed attempt on the required VCAP-DCA exam which in combination with a heavy load of customer commitments limited my ability to focus on it. Since I wasn’t accustomed to failing an exam, the DCA failure caught me off guard and I needed to regroup. It was then about 6 months later over the 2011 Thanksgiving (US) holiday that I had a little heart-to-heart with myself and decided regardless of the time, effort or success, I was going to go after the VCDX4 before it was updated to version 5. I was leaving too many good designs on the table which I had worked on with vSphere 4 to not try to at least defend one of them. That’s when my real, 6-month journey toward VCDX began. This involved the DCD4 exam in December, the DCA4 exam in January, the VCP5 upgrade and the DCD5 beta in February, the VCDX4 Design and application in March and then the VCDX4 Defense in May. Approximately 6-months start to finish, but ultimately the journey never ends or at least I hope it doesn’t.

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

My advice to those interested in the VCDX would be to dedicate themselves to the investment of time and resources necessary in the effort. This may mean the setup of a home lab, the time to read product guides, the repetition of product implementation and design, and/or the review of countless blogs and knowledge base articles. But beyond having a sound technical and architectural knowledge it will also require comfort in the spotlight, an ability to present from a white board, a quickness to think on your feet, an ability to envision the big picture design, and an openness to feedback, critique and improvement. With all that said, bottom line for anyone seriously considering it, I would say go for it. You’ll never know what could have been if you don’t try. I believe many will be surprised by what they can accomplish when they focus on a goal like the VCDX.

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

I probably would have started it earlier. Overall I felt the execution was successful once I got going, but for me it was just the issue of starting and sticking with it. Beyond that I don’t think I would have changed much.

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it

In my consulting position, the certifications are very much a part of the role and needed by the company to market, sell and deliver the solutions that we focus on. The certification definitely brought some recognition and accolades. It also provided some instant credibility amongst those in our community. For the most part, I do believe it was worth it mainly because of the challenge it provided to me and the opportunity to do what I love most which is work with the technology, understand the architecture of the products, solve the business problems of my customers, and participate in a community that is passionate about all these same things.


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VCDX Spotlight: Rick Scherer

Name: Rick Scherer

Twitter Handle: @rick_vmwaretips

Blog URL: http://www.vmwaretips.com

Current Employer: EMC

VCDX #: 21

How did you get into using VMware?

I first heard of and started using VMware Workstation in late 1999. I was a UNIX Administrator that was forced to live in a corporate Windows world. Workstation allowed me to have the best of both worlds. After thorough use and testing of the GSX and ESX products, by 2003 I was able to convince my (then employers) management that virtualization was a must for our datacenter. The rest is history.

What made you decide to do the VCDX?

Since day one I’ve been convinced that virtualization was a huge benefit for organizations large and small. Obtaining my first VCP (VCP2 #7315) in 2006 I’ve been following the work of the education team closely. When I was invited to be a beta participant in the then newly created VCDX program I saw it as an opportunity to validate my dedication, knowledge and experience. By making a candidate jump through as many hurdles that the VCDX program has, it really shows that VMware users are dedicated to the cause. This is a great way to give VMware additional validation to the industry.

How long did it take you to complete the whole VCDX journey?

From start to finish, an extremely long year, it was extremely rewarding being part of the beta program process though. Being able to assist in the shaping of the program, how the Design and Administration exams were written was really fun.

What advice would you give to people thinking of pursuing the VCDX accreditation?

Know your stuff, inside and out. The VCDX is really a mixture of everything, knowing not only how to fully design and architect a virtualized infrastructure (not only from a VMware perspective but the associated compute, network and storage), but also how to implement that design, manage that design, upgrade that design and operate that design.

Get as much hands on as possible. Learn as much as possible about how compute, network and storage relate to virtualization. Learn how applications relate to virtual machines. Know your design. That’s probably the most important thing, for your defense do not design your dream architecture, keep it simple and keep it to something you’ve done before. Know it inside and out, know what failed and how you fixed it. Don’t say you designed a specific thing to meet Best Practices, know why it’s the best practice.

Also, if you’re married… get your spouse’s buy-in on the journey as well. You’re going to spend a lot of time away from them while you’re on the journey and you’ll need more support than you’ve ever needed before.

If you could do the whole VCDX journey again what would you do differently?

No regrets, I loved every single part of the process. I wish I didn’t rush through it as fast as I possibly did, but I was so excited to be part of something new, something fresh and something fun! How awesome is it to be VCDX #21! J

Life after the VCDX?  How did your company respond?  Was it worth it?

I think obtaining the VCDX certification opened a lot of new doors and opportunities. Since obtaining my VCDX I’ve joined EMC as part of their vSpecialist organization, here I’m able to put my knowledge and experience directly to use as I evangelize companies about all of the amazing benefits of virtualization, application modernization, end-user computing and now cloud computing.


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VMware vSphere Data Protection

vSphere Data Protection (VDP) is a robust, simple-to-deploy, disk-based backup and recovery solution. VDP is fully integrated with VMware vCenter Server and enables centralized and efficient management of backup jobs while storing backups in de-duplicated destination storage.

Benefits:

•VDP leverages VMware vSphere API for Data Protection (VADP) which includes Changed Block Tracking (CBT) along with the EMC Avamar variable-length segment de-duplication engine to optimize backup and recovery times. Initial backups take a fair amount of time, but subsequent backups can be as little as a few minutes depending on the number of changes that have occurred since the last backup.

•Backup agents are not needed as VDP leverages VADP. VMs are backed up to disk-based storage (.vmdk files attached to the VDP virtual appliance).

•De-duplication occurs not only within each VM, but across all backups jobs and all VMs being backed up by the VDP appliance.

•A VM that utilizes an agent for backup and recovery require the VM to be in a powered on state. With VDP, that is not the case – backups and recoveries can be performed regardless of the VM’s power state.

•The is no need to install backup management software on an administrator’s workstation. Configuration and management of VDP is web browser based. Currently supported browsers: IE 7, 8 on Windows. Firefox 3.6 and higher on Windows or Linux. Adobe Flash is required.

•Restores can be entire VM or individual files and folders/directories. The file-level restore user interface (UI) is web based, simple, and intuitive meaning end-users can perform self-service file-level restores (administrator permissions required).

•Deployment, configuration and management of VDP is done via a web browser based graphical user interface (GUI). The majority of configuration tasks are completed using intuitive wizard-driven workflows.

vSphere Data Protection Key Components

VDP VM Appliance

•VDP is a virtual machine appliance deployed from a .ova (open virtual appliance or application) file.

vSphere Infrastructure

vSphere API for Data Protection (VADP) is utilized by VDP. This includes the Changed Block Tracking (CBT) mechanism. CBT tracks the changes made to a VM at the block level and provides this information to VDP so that only changed blocks are backed up. This significantly reduces storage consumption and speeds up backup and recovery times with VDP.

•VMware Tools on Windows contains Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) components to assist with guest OS and application quiescing when backing up Windows VMs. More details on VSS can be found here: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee923636(v=WS.10).aspx

VDP Architecture

•The appliance is deployed by default with 4 vCPUs and 4 GB RAM.

•Available in three sizes: 5 TB, 1 TB, and 2 TB – these are usable destination datastore sizes. The actual amount of disk space (thick provisioned) consumed by the appliance is 850 GB (3 .vmdk files), 1600 GB (7 .vmdk files), and 3100 GB (13 .vmdk files) respectively. Thin provisioning can be used, but the administrator should closely monitor disk consumption. It is important to note that once the VDP appliance is deployed, the size cannot be changed.

•The VDP appliance guest OS is SuSE Linux 11.

•vCenter Server 5.1 is required to use VDP. VDP can backup VMs on hosts running vSphere 4.0 and higher.

•VDP management is done via the vSphere Web Client. There is no plug-in for the vCenter Server “thick” client.