NSX-v 6.4 was released a couple of weeks ago and as I talked about in my launch post, there are a lot of new features and enhancements that make this release significant. A big focus for this release was around enhancing NSX’s ease of use and serviceability. There have been a number of additions to the UI with additional dashboards and menu items. Also importantly, a first port of the NSX Web Client functionality over the to HTML5 Web Client.

What’s interesting about the approach that the NSX product team has taken is that they have decided to have each new feature in the HTML5 Web Client accessible from the old Flash based Web Client as well. They have also continued to improve on the layout and usability of the flash based vSphere Web Client so what you have now is a combination of Flash and HTML5 inside the old Web Client as well as a limited pure HTML5 NSX experience in the new Web Client.

Among the enhancements to the UI is the improvement in the navigation menu where some commonly used menu items that where clicks away have been brought into the main tree. As you can see below there is a lot more happening in the 6.4 menu tree on the right vs the previous releases on the left.

The HTML5 menu is a little shorter with only a couple of items added however it shows you what it will look like when the porting is complete. Also shown in the picture below is the new System Scale Dashboard that provides visibility into the current usage of various NSX components and system capacity relative to configuration maximums with warning thresholds configurable.Highlighting the Flash+HTML cross over in the Flash Web Client, the System Scale Dashboard is also present in the old Web Client and shown below.In terms of other UI additions there is now an EAM status monitor in the Host Preparation Tab and a direct way from the Web Client to generate Support Bundle…which again, is available from both Web Clients.

Probably one of the coolest features in NSX-v 6.4 is the Upgrade Coordinator.

When you upgrade using Upgrade Coordinator, you can select to perform a One Click Upgrade, where everything is upgraded during one upgrade session. Or you can select to Plan Your Upgrade, and customize which components are upgraded, and organize component objects into upgrade groups.

Conclusion:

Working you way through the wizard you can select which components to upgrade.For me have control of the NSX Edge upgrades is super important as this has historically been a monotonous task for Service Providers with lots of customer using vCloud Director Edge services. The Upgrade Coordinator streamlines this upgrade task and makes the process a lot more efficient.Having the ability to group and order the upgrade process for Edges (and Service VMs) is also an excellent enhancement. Once the wizard has been completed you are shown a progress dashboard which you can click into to view the current state of upgrading components.Once completed, you should have all components upgraded and you can go through the post upgrade tasks and once completed you can always get an overview of the NSX environment by clicking on the main dashboard.

There is a lot to like about where the NSX team is taking the user interface and it’s good to see an initial move over to the HTML5 Web Client while also having that same functionality still accessible via the Flash Web Client. To have a loot at what is currently supported and what is not in the HTML5 vs Flash Client head to this page and check out the support tables.

I’m looking forward to future updates that will look to push more functionality directly into the HTML5 Web Client.

References:

https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-NSX-for-vSphere/6.4/rn/nsx-vsphere-client-65-functionality-support.html

https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-NSX-for-vSphere/6.4/com.vmware.nsx.upgrade.doc/GUID-A539869B-9858-48B3-90ED-2336698EE386.html

Share this: Twitter

LinkedIn

Reddit

WhatsApp



Like this: Like Loading...