WHAT'S NEW IN VMWARE VSPHERE 6.7 Migrate- Siage 2: vCenter se Select migration data to the tayel 4 lect meadon data thon (87 cm estmated drwwrhme D minute raton and history aM tween tki are perormance methe)(277 Ga) CANCELBACH Figure 4. Background Data Migration Upgrad v Sphere 6.7 supports upgrades and migrations from only v Sphere 6.0 or 6.5 vSphere 5.5 does not have a direct upgrade path to vsphere 6.7. Customers stil on vSphere 5.5 must first upgrade to vSphere 6.0 or 6.5 and then to vSphere 6.7. Also, a vCenter Server 6.0 or 6.5 instance managing esXi 5.5 hosts cannot be upgraded or migrated until the hosts have been upgraded to EsXi 6.0 or later. NOTE: General support for vSphere 5.5 ends September 19, 2018 Monitoring and Management A considerable amount of investment went into improving the monitoring for vCenter Server Appliance. These improvements started in vSphere 6.5, and vSphere 6.7 adds several new enhancements. First, log in to the ami on port 5480 he first thing to notice is that the vami has been updated to the Clarity Ul. Also, there are several new tabs on the left-hand side compared to v Sphere 6.5.There is now a tab dedicated to monitoring, for views of CPU, memory, network, and database utilization. A new section of the monitoring tab called Disks is now available in vCenter Server 6.7. Users can now see each of the disk partitions for vCenter Server Appliance instance, along with its allocated space and utilization. Ware WHITE PAPER I 10WHITE PAPER | 1 0 WHAT’S NEW IN VMWARE vSPHERE 6.7 Figure 4. Background Data Migration Upgrade vSphere 6.7 supports upgrades and migrations from only vSphere 6.0 or 6.5. vSphere 5.5 does not have a direct upgrade path to vSphere 6.7. Customers still on vSphere 5.5 must first upgrade to vSphere 6.0 or 6.5 and then to vSphere 6.7. Also, a vCenter Server 6.0 or 6.5 instance managing ESXi 5.5 hosts cannot be upgraded or migrated until the hosts have been upgraded to ESXi 6.0 or later. NOTE: General support for vSphere 5.5 ends September 19, 2018. Monitoring and Management A considerable amount of investment went into improving the monitoring for vCenter Server Appliance. These improvements started in vSphere 6.5, and vSphere 6.7 adds several new enhancements. First, log in to the VAMI on port 5480. The first thing to notice is that the VAMI has been updated to the Clarity UI. Also, there are several new tabs on the left-hand side compared to vSphere 6.5. There is now a tab dedicated to monitoring, for views of CPU, memory, network, and database utilization. A new section of the monitoring tab called Disks is now available in vCenter Server 6.7. Users can now see each of the disk partitions for a vCenter Server Appliance instance, along with its allocated space and utilization