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With scores of step-by-step solutions, this cookbook helps you work with VMware ESXi in a wide range of network environments. You’ll not only learn the basics—how to pool resources from hardware servers, computer clusters, networks, and storage, and then distribute them among virtual machines—but also how to overcome the stumbling blocks you’ll encounter when you monitor systems, troubleshoot problems, and deal with security.
This expanded second edition covers recent advances in vCloud Director and vShield cloud security. Ideal for system administrators of any level, VMware Cookbook also includes valuable information to help you determine your virtualization needs.
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Move into the cloud with vCloud Director, and secure virtual datacenters with vSphere
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Secure and monitor your virtual environment from the command line
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Manage disk, SSD, and SAN storage implementation and configuration
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Discover options for managing resources, such as clustering, shares, and hot add/hotplug support
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Configure logical and physical networks, including virtual switches and software and hardware adapters
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Make virtual machine replication easier by automating ESXi installations
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Gain valuable tips for configuration and fine-tuning
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A Textbook of Graph Theory (Universitext)
This second edition includes two new chapters: one on domination in graphs and the other on the spectral properties of graphs, the latter including a discussion on graph energy. The chapter on graph colorings has been enlarged, covering additional topics such as homomorphisms and colorings and the uniqueness of the... | | Beginning Shell Scripting (Programmer to Programmer)Shell scripts give you the power to automate tedious daily tasks, improve your work capabilities, and get more out of your computers. Whether you are working on Mac OS®X, Linux®, Unix®, or Windows®, this book presents complete shell scripting instructions, robust code examples, and full... | | Pro JavaScript for Web Apps
Client-side web app development has always been the poor cousin to server-side coding. This started
because browsers and the devices they run on have been less capable than enterprise-class servers. To
provide any kind of serious web app functionality, the server had to do all of the heavy lifting for the
browsers, which was pretty... |
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