DataPower Gateway for VMware
DataPower® Gateway for VMware enables the deployment on self-hosted VMware hypervisors or cloud environments that are powered by VMware hypervisors. The deployment process uses an OVA to create a DataPower Gateway on a VMware hypervisor.
Before you begin
Obtain the deployment package and verify file integrity.
- xxx.prod.ova is the OVA production file.
- xxx.nonprod.ova is the OVA nonproduction file.
- xxx.dev.ova is the OVA developers file.
A hypervisor accesses resources that they are provisioned with. For successful deployment, you must understand the nature of your network environment.
About this task
- The XML file contains resource descriptions, such as vCPU, memory, and disk information.
- The first disk is a 16 GB encrypted SCSI virtual disk. This disk contains the DataPower firmware and stores user configuration data and artifacts. You cannot change the size.
- The second disk is an empty 16 GB virtual disk. This disk supplies storage after you enable the RAID volume. This disk is an SCSI-attached LSI Logic virtual device. You can increase or reduce the volume in the hypervisor client. However, after you create a file system on the RAID volume, you cannot change the RAID volume unless you re-create a file system. Reducing the RAID volume with a file system breaks the file system. Increasing the volume does not take effect until you re-create the file system.
- When B2B storage is enabled during initial firmware configuration, only half of the RAID volume is available for service data processing. In this case, increase the RAID volume to process large documents and manage high throughput.
- If the deployment uses thin provisioning, the hypervisor allocates 258.6 MB disk space that expands as needed.
- If the deployment uses thick provisioning, the hypervisor allocates 32 GB disk space.
- Without API workload
- The minimum resource allocation is 4 vCPU (virtual processors) and 4 GB RAM.
- With API workload
- The minimum resource allocation is 4 vCPU and 8 GB RAM independent of edition.
| Configuration name | vCPU | RAM (GB) |
|---|---|---|
| Small | 4 | 8 |
| Standard (default) | 8 | 16 |
| Enterprise | 16 | 96 |
The installation templates define the virtual network interface controllers (NICs), which ignore
your settings for the physical mode and flow control mode of the network adapters. The
eth0, eth1, eth2, and eth3 NICs
are available.
The following table shows an example mapping between the DataPower NIC and the VMware virtual network adapter in a default vSphere network setup, where four physical NICs are available. When you configure the VMware network, set the adapter type to VMXNET Generation 3 (VMXNET 3) that is a paravirtualized NIC.
| DataPower NIC | VMware adapter name | VMware adapter type |
|---|---|---|
eth0 |
VM Network 1 | VMXNET 3 |
eth1 |
VM Network 2 | VMXNET 3 |
eth2 |
VM Network 3 | VMXNET 3 |
eth3 |
VM Network 4 | VMXNET 3 |
Procedure
- Import the OVA.
- Deploy the OVA with the hypervisor product interface. Although the OVA is configured to set 8 vCPUs, you can change the allocation.
- Start the virtual machine with the hypervisor product interface. If you see a vCPU error in VMware Workstation Player, change the vCPU number to 2.
What to do next
Modify resource allocation in the hypervisor product interface as necessary.
Initialize the DataPower Gateway. When you log in, use
admin for the username and password.