►
From YouTube: Downloading and Installing vSphere Integrated Containers
Description
See our updated video for v1.4.0 at https://youtu.be/DKR7ijfEHis
This video tutorial is about everything you need to know in order to download and install vSphere Integrated Containers in your environment.
Please visit the following link for Virtual Container Host Creation workflow. - https://youtu.be/FXLVNc7NRJ8
For more information please visit the vSphere Integrated Containers (VIC) product page:
https://www.vmware.com/products/vsphere/integrated-containers.html
A
Yeah
welcome
to
my
latest
video
on
how
to
download
and
install
vSphere
integrated
containers
I'm
going
to
take
you
through
everything
that
you
need
to
know
to
install
a
Vic
to
your
vSphere
cluster
and
what
it
is
and
what
it
does
so,
hopefully,
we'll
get
all
that
in
around
20
minutes.
So
the
very
first
thing
you
need
to
know
is:
where
do
I
find
information
on
Vic
and
how
do
I
download
it
now?
A
The
place
that
I
would
start
is
VMware
Doug,
github
dot
product,
because
it
gives
you
a
little
bit
of
information,
but
critically
it
gives
you
the
important
links
that
you
need.
So
if
we
click
on
download
here,
for
example,
and
right
click
on
the
download
link,
it
will
take
you
to
my
VMware,
where
you
can
basically
download
the
OVA.
Now
I'll
start
that
going
now
now,
you'll
notice
that
the
previous
versions
of
Vic
shipped
as
separate
downloads,
now
Vic
1.1.1,
everything
is
bundled
together
in
the
OVA.
A
That's
the
registry,
the
management
UI
and
the
engine
and
you'll
see
all
of
those
in
detail
when
we
come
to
install
them
now.
Other
useful
information-
that's
linked
off
of
here,
you
can
link
the
documentation
which
is
here
which
we'll
be
looking
at
a
little
bit
later
on.
It
also
links
to
how
to
get
in
touch
with
us
now.
You'll
see,
there's
various
different
slack
channels
here,
so
I
can
open
the
The
Vic
product,
slack
Channel,
and
this
is
monitored.
We
engage
with
people
on
this
slack
channel
I
haven't
in
a
while.
A
I'll,
be
quite
honest.
What
we
do,
and
the
other
thing
that
you'll
find,
is
the
link
to
our
actual
code,
because
everything
that
we
do
is
an
open
source,
so
you
can
link
to
our
Vic
Engine
github
repo,
and
you
can
raise
issues
in
here
as
well.
If
you
really
want
to,
if
you
find
problems,
we
really
want
to
hear
from
you
just
click
on
issues
here
and
new
issue
and
tell
us
what's
wrong.
A
As
you
can
see,
I
literally
just
raised
an
issue
about
the
fact
that
the
link
to
our
Doc's
is
wrong
in
the
github
page,
so
there
you
go
showing
a
shining
example
of
how
to
raise
an
issue.
So,
let's
look
at
the
V,
the
infrastructure
that
I'm
going
to
be
installing
my
OVA
to
as
you
can
see,
I
have
a
cluster
right
here
now.
This
cluster
is
configured
with
DRS
and
V.
San
enabled
I
have
three
hosts
in
that
cluster,
and
this
is
where
I'm
going
to
be
deploying
my
OVA
to
now.
A
As
I
mentioned,
the
OVA
has
the
management
UI.
It
has
the
registry
and
it
has
the
potential
to
install
virtual
container
hosts
now
we'll
get
onto
more
detail
about
virtual
container
hosts
a
little
bit
later,
but
suffice
to
say
that
a
virtual
container
host
is
a
docker
endpoint
for
a
tenant
right.
So
as
an
admin,
you
install
a
virtual
container
host
to
give
somebody
the
ability
to
provision
docker
containers
to
this
vSphere
infrastructure.
So
I
have
a
cluster
of
three
hosts.
A
I
have
a
couple
of
a
few
local
data
stores,
but
I
also
have
an
ice.
Cozy
datastore
and
a
v-sign
datastore
in
terms
of
networking
I
have
a
distributed.
Virtual
switch
with
a
few
different
port
groups
added
and
this
external
network
is
the
network
that
I
get
to
the
outside
world
on.
So
that's
a
quick
summary
of
my
infrastructure,
so
let's
go
ahead
and
install
the
OVA
now
that
it's
downloaded
so
I
need
to
select
it.
A
A
A
Domain
name
server
IP
addresses
is
going
to
be
okay.
Now
an
important
point
about
the
DNS
servers.
They
are
spaced
separated,
not
comma,
separated
I
made
that
mistake
once
and
it
was
an
unpleasant
user
experience
because
it
caused
some
undefined
behavior,
which
I
raised
a
bug
about,
but
just
bear
in
mind.
Space
separated,
no
comma
separated
the
main
search
path
ends:
dot
vmware.com.
A
And
the
qualified
domain
name
of
this
is
B
quarry
test,
11.
Okay,
so
those
are
my
network
settings.
They
look
correct
so
now,
I'm
going
to
go
down
and
I'm
gonna
set
the
password
for
the
admin
account
on
the
registry
and
the
password
for
the
database
using
the
same
password
everything
for
everything.
As
you
can
see,
I'm
gonna
hit
the
garbage
collection
button
so
that
if,
when
the
registry
boots
up,
it
doesn't
bit
of
clean
up
now,
that's
pretty
much
all
you
need
to
set.
A
You
can
provide
certificates
for
the
management
portal
and
the
file
server.
That
gives
you
the
the
Vic
engine
installer.
We
don't
really
need
to
do
any
of
those
things.
In
fact,
you
can
do
the
same
thing
for
the
the
registry
as
well:
I'm
just
going
to
go
with
the
default
certificates,
I'm
happy
with
all
the
settings.
A
So,
let's
go
to
next
and
then
finish
so
now
it's
going
to
install
the
OVA
and
let's
take
a
pause
and
fast
forward
to
when
the
OVA
is
installed
and
powered
on
okay,
so
the
OVA
is
now
successfully
installed
and
I've
powered
it
on,
and
the
next
thing
we
need
to
know
is:
how
do
I
access
the
services
that
are
running
in
this
OVA?
So,
let's
click
on
the
console
and
see
it
there.
It's
basically
telling
us
that
we
have
a
management
portal
at
port
80
to
82.