About Ather Beg

Ather is a Senior Specialist Solutions Architect and works for Amazon Web Services. His focus is on all things related to cloud, technology, storage, virtualization and whatever comes in between. Being in the industry for over 27 years, Ather has been a vExpert for 10 years running and is also vExpert NSX/HCX/CloudProvider. He has also been an official VMware blogger at VMworld EU and US and is one of the founding members and contributor to Open HomeLab Wiki and co-hosts @OpenTechCast as well. Ather’s natural habitat is tech events like VMworld, Cloud (and other) Field Days, VMUGs etc. and he thrives on meeting like-minded people and having a good old chat about technology. He’s friendly and not dangerous at all so please do interact with him whenever you spot him in such surroundings.
18 06, 2015

Adding PowerShell Hosts with Kerberos Authentication: krb5.conf Explained

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00June 18th, 2015|Orchestrator, vCAC, Virtualization, vRA, vRO|2 Comments

When adding Powershell hosts to vRealize Orchestrator using Kerberos Authentication, one has to create the krb5.conf file. There are various articles on that and the best one I've seen is "this one", so I am not going to repeat all that information here. However, I thought to write something up about what's important to remember while [...]

11 06, 2015

Free Learning Library from Packt Publishing

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00June 11th, 2015|General, Virtualization|0 Comments

Today, I found out about an offer that is impossible to resist and thought the word should be spread about it immediately so that people can start benefiting right away. Packt Publishing has started this "Free Learning Library" which means that customers get a chance to grab a free eBook everyday! Book of the day [...]

26 05, 2015

vRealize Automation REST Plugin error: Connection Pool Shut Down

By |2015-05-26T09:59:20+01:00May 26th, 2015|Cloud, vCAC, Virtualization, vRA, vRO|0 Comments

A few days back, I was working with REST operations in vRealize Automation when suddenly, I was hit by the following error, when trying to "Invoke a REST Operation": Connection pool shut down (Workflow:Invoke a REST operation / REST call (item0)#6) I checked the inventory and the target host was still there and nothing seemed [...]

31 03, 2015

Useful Links for NTP Configuration in vSphere Environments

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00March 31st, 2015|ESX, vCenter, Virtualization, VMware, vSphere, Windows|0 Comments

A few months ago, I was helping out a customer with a time configuration issue on their vSphere environment. For one specific question, I investigated and wrote the post: ESXi Time Configuration: Don’t point it towards the Windows Domain name However, while doing the investigations, I went through various documents produced by VMware. As NTP [...]

6 02, 2015

CrowdChat on vSphere 6

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00February 6th, 2015|Virtualization, vSphere|0 Comments

A few days back, Corey Romero asked me if I am interested in co-hosting a CrowdChat session on vSphere. Having never been on CrowdChat, jumping from nothing to co-hosting seemed a bit intimidating but I've always liked a challenge so I said yes. Plus, this was another something that I could do for this amazing community easily [...]

2 02, 2015

vSphere 6: Upgrade Considerations

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00February 2nd, 2015|vCenter, Virtualization, VMware, vSphere|7 Comments

Chances are that unless you are an organisation new to vSphere or want an installation in the lab, you will be upgrading your existing vSphere infrastructure to the new vSphere 6.0 at some point in the future. As there are some design changes in this version, there are decision points that must be considered before [...]

2 02, 2015

vSphere 6: VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA): Design Decisions

By |2016-12-11T15:25:01+00:00February 2nd, 2015|vCenter, Virtualization, VMware, vSphere|7 Comments

We all know the pains that vSphere Certificate management presents us with. While VMware's Certificate Administration tool has made life a bit simpler, it is still quite a chore to generate requests, get the certificates (in the right format) and installing it in the right order. It was also quite a bit of work to [...]

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