VMware recently announced the GA - general available of vSphere 6.5 and I have been meaning to upgrade my homelab management cluster vCenter - VCSA 6 to 6.5 since then. Finally got the change request approval from my missus. :)
If you would like to read more on the GA announcement check out the link below.
VMware has done a great job with VCSA installer and making it easier to install even from my Linux Mint laptop or Apple macOS if you have one. The process is similar to fresh install and it is pretty straight forward with two stages of installation. The first stage is to deploy new VCSA on the network with temporary IP address in the same subnet as the existing VCSA. The second stage copy the data from old VCSA to newly deployed VCSA 6.5.
Stage 1 of the deployment
- Download VCSA 6.5 ISO file from VMware from the link below. https://my.vmware.com/group/vmware/details?downloadGroup=VC650&productId=614&rPId=13348
If you are deploying it in production or test/dev environment at your work, it is worth checking VMware Interoperability Matrix before any upgrade.
- Mount the ISO (I use Linux Mint on my laptop) and run the installer file from 'vcsa-ui-installer/lin64' folder or type "./installer" from the terminal.
- Start the upgrade by clicking Upgrade button and follow the upgrade wizard.
- Accept the license agreement and Next.
- Enter the FQDN/IP and account details of your existing VCSA and ESXi host.
- Accept the security certificate warning if you trust it.
- Enter ESXi host details to run new VCSA on it.
- Enter the VM name of new VCSA which must be unique from the existing one if hosting in the same cluster.
- Select the deployment size of VCSA that matches your requirement. I went with Tiny as I have less than 10 host and 100 VMs in my lab.
- Pick the datastore for new VCSA. Tick "Enable Thin Disk Mode" if you have storage capacity constraint.
- Select the network portgroup and assign temporary IP address to new VCSA. It is recommended to put in the same subnet as the existing VCSA.
- Review the config summary and click Finish.
- The deployment of new VCSA will commence and you will see the following screen once its completed to continue with the stage 2.
Stage 2 of deployment
- Click Next to continue with the upgrade
- You will see the warning regarding Pre-Upgrade check result and ensure the upgrade conditions are met.
- Ensure DRS Automation is set to manual or DRS is off before proceeding. I set VCSA VM not to participate in DRS as I have it running on local storage of host 2.
- Select the data you want to migrate to new VCSA. Since this my home lab I am copying only configuration data and not concerned about historical data.
- Uncheck the checkbox if you do not wish to join VMware CEP to improve their product.
- Review the summary and acknowledge that you have backup of the source vCenter server and database.
- As mention, the source vCenter will be shutdown once the network configurations are copied over to the new vCenter. It is good that Upgrade process does not delete the source VM and you can always bring it back online if the upgrade gone sideway.
- Click OK to continue with the migration.
- Now go get a coffee or do something while the migration is in progress.
- If everything goes well you will see the following screen and upgrade is completed. Enjoy!!
Check out the vSphere 6.5 release note if you would like to get more details on the product.