Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 First Published: August 01, 2015 Americas Headquarters Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www.cisco.com Tel: 408 526-4000 800 553-NETS (6387) Fax: 408 527-0883 THE SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL STATEMENTS, INFORMATION, AND RECOMMENDATIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURATE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST TAKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICATION OF ANY PRODUCTS. THE SOFTWARE LICENSE AND LIMITED WARRANTY FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PRODUCT ARE SET FORTH IN THE INFORMATION PACKET THAT SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY. 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CONTENTS CHAPTER 1 Overview 1 About Cisco Virtual Application Container Services 1 About the Self-Service Portal 1 Logging Into the Cisco UCS Director 2 Understanding the Self-Service Portal 3 Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services 4 CHAPTER 2 Managing Service Requests 7 About Service Requests 7 Service Request Workflows 7 Creating a Service Request for Service Container Catalogs 8 Viewing the Service Request Status 9 Viewing the Service Request History for a Group 10 Cancelling a Service Request 10 Searching the Service Request History for a Group 10 Exporting Group Service Requests History 11 CHAPTER 3 Performing VM Lifecycle Management 13 About VM Lifecycle Management Actions 13 Viewing All VMs 15 Managing VM Power 15 Resizing VMs 16 Managing VM Snapshots 17 Creating Snapshots 17 Reverting Snapshots 18 Marking a Snapshot as Golden 18 Unmarking a Golden Snapshot 19 Deleting Snapshots 19 Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 iii Contents Deleting All Snapshots 20 Creating a VM Disk 21 Resizing a VM Disk 21 Deleting A VM Disk 22 Resynchronizing a VM 23 Viewing VM Details 23 Launching VM Client 23 Enabling the VNC Console on a VM 24 Testing VNC Connectivity 25 Enabling or Disabling VMRC Console Access 25 Mounting the ISO Image as CD/DVD Drive 26 CHAPTER 4 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal 27 Viewing Reports 27 Types of Reports 28 Powering on the Application Container 29 Powering off the Application Container 30 Adding Virtual Machines 30 Deleting Virtual Machines 32 Configuring Static NAT to the Virtual Machines 33 Configuring ERSPAN 34 Managing Firewall Policies 35 Viewing Firewall ACL Rules 35 Adding Firewall ACL Rules 36 Editing Firewall ACL Rules 38 Deleting Firewall ACL Rules 39 Deleting Application Containers 40 Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 iv CHAPTER 1 Overview This chapter contains the following sections. • About Cisco Virtual Application Container Services, page 1 • About the Self-Service Portal, page 1 • Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services, page 4 About Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Cisco Virtual Application Container Services (Cisco VACS) is a software solution that automates the coordinated licensing, installation, and deployment of multiple virtual services in your datacenter to enable an easy and efficient setup of virtualized applications. Cisco VACS provides a fully customizable extended application container abstraction to simplify deploying and provisioning the virtual services. Cisco VACS allows you to define extended application container templates and to instantiate them through automated setup and provisioning of the underlying virtual components. Cisco UCS Director provides the management interface to deploy, provision, and monitor the Cisco VACS solution. Cisco VACS provides you with a choice of ready-to-use application container templates that define the rules for deploying a collection of virtual machines (VMs) within a private network secured by a firewall. An application container is a set of virtual services such as virtual switches, routers, firewalls, and other network devices configured in a consistent manner to deploy different workloads. When you create and instantiate an application container template, Cisco VACS deploys VMs, and configures networks, the firewall, and virtual switches, and enables quick provisioning of network and security at the virtual layer. About the Self-Service Portal You can use the Cisco UCS Director Self-Service Portal for self-service provisioning, monitoring, and management capabilities. With the Self-Service Portal, you can create a request for a VACS container, perform container related operations permitted for the service end user. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 1 Overview Logging Into the Cisco UCS Director Attention • This document describes the Self-Service Portal for a service end user only. For information on the Self-Service Portal for administrators, see the http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/ servers-unified-computing/ucs-director/products-maintenance-guides-list.html. • This user guide documents all of the configuration settings available in the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal. This guide assumes that your network administrator has configured the portal to display all user settings. If a setting that is in this guide does not appear in the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal UI that you are accessing, you must contact your network administrator. Logging Into the Cisco UCS Director Step 1 Step 2 In the Address field of the browser, enter the IP address of the Cisco UCS Director and press Enter. The Cisco UCS Director login page appears. Enter the username and password in the Username and Password fields, and click Login. The Cisco UCS Director home page appears. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 2 Overview Understanding the Self-Service Portal Understanding the Self-Service Portal This section describes the Self-Service portal and the Cisco VACS features that you can access using Cisco UCS Director. Figure 1: Self-Service Portal Table 1: Elements of the Self-Service Portal Number Description 1 The Menu bar displays tabs that allow you to view the Cisco VACS solution interface, along with the UCS Director Self-Service tabs. 2 The sub menu displays the tabs that provide details corresponding to the menu tabs. 3 The subset menu displays the Cisco VACS features that allow you to power on/off a container, add and delete VMs, and configure the ERSPAN and Static NAT features, and manage firewall policies. 4 The Application Containers area displays the available containers. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 3 Overview Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services 5 This sub menu displays buttons that allows you to do the following: • customize the table • export reports • add an advance filter • search 6 This sub menu displays buttons that allows you to do the following: • view user information • log out of the Cisco UCS Director interface • view the Cisco web page • view information about the Cisco UCS Director • view the Cisco UCS Director Online Help • search for objects Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services This section lists the documents used with the Cisco VACS components and are available on Cisco.com at the following URL: Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Documentation General Information Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Release Notes Installation Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Installation and Upgrade Guide Configuration Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Configuration Guide User Information Cisco Virtual Application Container Self-Service Portal User Guide Nexus 1000V Documentation For the Cisco Nexus 1000V for VMware vSphere Documentation: Cisco Nexus 1000V for VMware vSphere Documentation Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 4 Overview Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Prime Network Services Controller Documentation Cisco Prime Network Services Controller Documentation Cloud Services Router 1000V Documentation Cisco Cloud Services Router 1000V Documentation Virtual Security Gateway Documentation Cisco Virtual Security Gateway Documentation UCS Director Documentation Cisco UCS Director Documentation Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 5 Overview Related Documentation for the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 6 CHAPTER 2 Managing Service Requests This chapter contains the following sections. • About Service Requests, page 7 • Service Request Workflows, page 7 • Creating a Service Request for Service Container Catalogs, page 8 • Viewing the Service Request Status, page 9 • Viewing the Service Request History for a Group, page 10 • Cancelling a Service Request, page 10 • Searching the Service Request History for a Group, page 10 • Exporting Group Service Requests History, page 11 About Service Requests You can use the self-service provisioning feature to create a service request to provision virtual machines (VMs), services, or applications. Service Request Workflows The service request workflow can be summarized into several stages: • Initiation—Service request initiation. • Resource Allocation—Resources required for VM provisioning. • Provision—The act of provisioning a VM. • Setup Lifecycle Schedule— The scheduled and termination time. • Notify—An email notice that states information about the container is sent to the user. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 7 Managing Service Requests Creating a Service Request for Service Container Catalogs Creating a Service Request for Service Container Catalogs The administrator publishes catalogs to a group and end users choose the required catalog to create a service request. Before You Begin This type of service request requires that a service container catalog be available for selection. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Catalog > Service Container. Double click the appropriate catalog and then click Create Request. The Create Service Request wizard appears. Note You can also create a service request using the Services tab. To navigate to the Create Service Request wizard, do the following: 1 choose Services > Service Requests > Create Request. 2 In the Create Request dialog box, choose Service Container, and then click Submit to view the Create Service Request wizard. You can then proceed with the service request procedure. Step 3 In the Create Service Request screen, view the following fields: Name Description Catalog Type drop-down list The type of catalog is auto populated. Select Catalog drop-down list The catalog to be provisioned is auto populated. Step 4 Click Next. The Deployment Configuration screen appears. Step 5 In the Deployment Configuration screen, do the following: Name Description Comment field Enter the description for the service request. Provision drop-down list Choose the deployment time The available options are Now and Later. If you select Later, you are allowed to choose a date and time for this deployment. Service Container Name field Step 6 Enter the container name. Click Next. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 8 Managing Service Requests Viewing the Service Request Status The Summary screen appears. Step 7 In the Summary screen, review the information for accuracy, and then click Submit. Viewing the Service Request Status Before You Begin Create a service request. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Choose Services > Service Request. Choose a service request. Click View Details. The Service Request screen provides the details regarding the service request and the related workflow steps. From this page you view the status for each workflow step. Details, such as the time, are also displayed in addition to each step's status (color-coded). • Grey—Indicates the step still needs to be completed. • Green—Indicates the step completed successfully. • Red—Indicates the step failed. The reason for the failure is also specified under the step. • Blue—Indicates more input is required from the user for the step to be completed. For example, if an approver was defined for this service request, blue indicates that the service request is waiting for approval. Name Description Overview section Request ID field The service request ID number. Request Type field The type of request (for example, VM) Workflow Name field The name of the workflow. Request Time field The time the service request was created. Request Status field The status of the service request (for example, Complete, Canceled, or Failed). Comments field Comments added during the service request creation. Ownership section Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 9 Managing Service Requests Viewing the Service Request History for a Group Name Description Group field The group to which the user requesting the service request belongs. Initiating User field The user who initiated the service request. Note Approvers can view service requests that need their approval under the Approvals tab. Viewing the Service Request History for a Group End users can view all service requests created for your group. On the menu bar, click Services and choose the Service Requests tab. Cancelling a Service Request After submitting a service request, you can cancel it for any reason. Before You Begin Creating a service request. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 On the menu, choose Services > Service Requests. Choose the service request entry that needs to be canceled. Click Cancel Request. Click Submit to cancel the service request. Searching the Service Request History for a Group End users can search for the service request history for their group. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 10 Managing Service Requests Exporting Group Service Requests History Before You Begin Create a service request. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose the Services > Service Request tab. Enter the text or service request number in the search field. Note Criteria can be any text from any of the columns. Exporting Group Service Requests History Reports of service requests for all groups or any particular group can be exported into a tabular format. Before You Begin Creating service requests. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Services > Service Requests. Click the Export Report icon to generate a report of service requests. Reports can be exported in PDF, CSV, or XLS format. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 11 Managing Service Requests Exporting Group Service Requests History Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 12 CHAPTER 3 Performing VM Lifecycle Management This chapter contains the following sections. • About VM Lifecycle Management Actions, page 13 • Viewing All VMs, page 15 • Managing VM Power, page 15 • Resizing VMs, page 16 • Managing VM Snapshots, page 17 • Creating a VM Disk, page 21 • Resizing a VM Disk, page 21 • Deleting A VM Disk, page 22 • Resynchronizing a VM, page 23 • Viewing VM Details, page 23 • Launching VM Client, page 23 • Enabling the VNC Console on a VM, page 24 • Testing VNC Connectivity, page 25 • Enabling or Disabling VMRC Console Access, page 25 • Mounting the ISO Image as CD/DVD Drive, page 26 About VM Lifecycle Management Actions You can perform post provisioning lifecycle management actions that are permitted by the administrator. You can also view the entire list of virtual machines (VMs) provisioned using service requests under their group. All VMs that belong to a particular group are displayed. The administrator decides which of these management actions are permitted to you. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 13 Performing VM Lifecycle Management About VM Lifecycle Management Actions Attention After you perform any of the following VM lifecycle management actions, it is important that you perform the VM sync operation to get the latest status and other related information of the VM. The available VM lifecycle management actions are as follows: 1 VM Power Management • Power On • Power Off • Suspend • Standby • Reset • Reboot • Shutdown Guest 2 VM Resizing • Resize VM 3 VM Snapshot Management • Create Snapshot • Revert Snapshot • Mark Golden Snapshot • Delete Snapshot • Delete All Snapshots 4 VM Disk Management • Create VM Disk • VM Disk Resize • Delete VM Disk 5 VM Network Management • VM Resyn 6 VM Console Management • Launch VM Client • Configure VNC • Test VNC • Enable/Disable VMRC Console Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 14 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Viewing All VMs 7 VM SO Management Image as CD/DVD • Mount ISO Image as CD/DVD Drive Viewing All VMs The viewing all VMs feature displays all of the VMs and their details such as the VM ID, host name, IP address, and power state. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM from the list of available VMs to view the available management actions for that VM. Note The VM management actions that are available for a VM are based on the permissions granted by the administrator. Managing VM Power Managing the power functions of the VM includes the following actions: Note Step 1 Step 2 Action Description Power On Powers on the VM. Power Off Powers off the VM. Suspend Places the VM in a suspended state. Standby Moves the VM to standby state. Reset Performs a hard reset of the VM. Reboot Performs a soft reboot of the VM. Shutdown Guest Shuts down the Guest OS on the VM. To access these options on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Power On. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 15 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Resizing VMs In the VM Task dialog box, complete the following fields: Step 3 Name Description VM Name field Name of the VM. Task field Selected power management task. Comments field Enter comments if required. Schedule Action field Specify either to power on the VM now or at a specific date and time. Click Proceed. Note Repeat these steps to complete the other power management actions. Resizing VMs Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 To access the Resize VM option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Resize VM. In the Resize VM dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description VM Name field The name of the selected VM. Current Allocated CPU field The number of allocated CPUs being used by the VM. Current Allocated Memory (GB) field The amount of memory allocated to the VM. New CPU Count drop-down list Choose the CPU required from the drop-down list. New Memory drop-down list Choose the amount of memory required from the drop-down list. Click Resize. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 16 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Managing VM Snapshots Managing VM Snapshots You can create and manage snapshots of restore points during a recovery from a system disaster or malfunctions. A restore point is the complete state of a VM at a point in time. You may want to create snapshots from time to time to preserve the current state of a VM. For example, you can create a snapshot of your VM in its stable form before performing a potentially risky system operation. After creating several snapshots, you can view a VM snapshot summary report and identify which snapshots you want to preserve for future use (also know as golden snapshots). Golden snapshots cannot be deleted. Note The VM snapshot options on a VM are available based on the permissions granted by an administrator. Creating Snapshots The feature creates a snapshot of all of the VM's resources in their current state. You can also revert back to a particular snapshot (state). Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the Creating Snapshots option for a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permissions. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Create Snapshot. In the Create Virtual Machine Snapshot dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description Snapshot Name field The name of the snapshot. Snapshot Description field The description of the snapshot. Snapshot Memory check box Check the box to include VM memory. Quiesce Guest File System check box Check the box to take the snapshot in Quiesce mode. Quiescing a file system is a process of bringing the on-disk data of a physical or virtual computer into a state suitable for backups. This process may include operations as flushing dirty memory buffers from the operating system's in-memory cache to disk, or other higher-level application specific tasks. Note In order to use this option you have to have VMware tools installed on the VM. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 17 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Reverting Snapshots Step 3 Click Proceed. Reverting Snapshots If the VM crashes or malfunctions for any reason you can revert back to the most recent snapshot of the VM. You can also select a specific snapshot to revert back to, in case there is more than one snapshot for the VM available. Note To access the Revert Snapshots Details option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, click Virtual Resources and choose VMs. Right-click on a VM and choose Revert Snapshot. The Revert Virtual Machine Snapshot dialog box appears. Step 3 Complete the following checkbox. Step 4 Name Description Snapshot check box If checked, defines it as a snapshot. Click Proceed. Marking a Snapshot as Golden Marking a snapshot as golden prevents it from being accidentally deleted. The only way to delete a golden snapshot is to unmark the golden snapshot (returning it to a standard snapshot). Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the Mark Golden Snapshot option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Mark Golden Snapshot. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 18 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Unmarking a Golden Snapshot In the Mark Golden Snapshot dialog box, complete the following fields: Step 3 Name Description Snapshot check box Check the box against the appropriate snapshot that you want to mark as a golden snapshot. Marks As Golden Snapshot check box Check the box to mark the selected snapshot as a golden snapshot. Click Proceed. Unmarking a Golden Snapshot You can unmark a snapshot that earlier marked as golden. Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 To access the Mark Golden Snapshot option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Mark Golden Snapshot. In the Mark Golden Snapshot dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description Snapshot check box Check the box against the appropriate golden snapshot that you want to mark as a snapshot. Marks As Golden Snapshot check box Check the box to unmark the selected snapshot as a golden snapshot. Click Proceed. Deleting Snapshots Snapshots deemed unimportant can be deleted to make more disk space for newer snapshots. However, you can delete only those snapshots that are unmarked as golden snapshots. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 19 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Deleting All Snapshots Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 To access the Delete Snaphot option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Delete Snapshot. In the Delete Snapshot dialog box, complete the following check boxes: Name Description Snapshot check box Check the box to select a snapshot. Delete Children check box Check the box to delete the children of the selected snapshot. Click Proceed. Deleting All Snapshots You can delete all available snapshots unless a golden snapshot is present. If a golden snapshot is available, you must unmark that golden snapshot before being able to delete all the snapshots. Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 To access the Delete All Snaphots option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Delete All Snapshots. In the Delete All Snapshots dialog box, complete the following check box: Name Description Delete All Snapshots check box Check the box to delete all the snapshots. Click Proceed. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 20 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Creating a VM Disk Creating a VM Disk Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the Create VM Disk option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Create VM Disk. In the Create VM Disk dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description VM Name field The name of the selected VM. New Disk (GB) field Enter the disk size for the VM in GB. Select Disk Type drop-down list Select the required disk from the drop-down list. Select Datastore drop-down list Select a datastore from the drop-down list. Note Thin Provision check box Check this check box to use thin provisioning during VM creation. Note Step 3 The datastore's selection is available, depending upon the storage policy that is associated to the VM. Thin provisioning enables dynamic allocation of the physical storage capacity to increase VM storage utilization. Click Create. Resizing a VM Disk This feature allows you modify the allocated (provisioned) disk space for the VM. By default, you can only increase the disk size of the VM. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 21 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Deleting A VM Disk • The disk size of a VM can only be increased and not decreased. Note • To access the VM Disk Resize option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click VM Disk Resize. In the Resize VM Disk dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description VM Name field The name of the VM. This name cannot be edited. Step 3 Select Disk drop-down list Select the VM disk from the drop-down list. Total Provisioned (GB) field Displays the total provisioned space of the selected disk on the VM. New Size (GB) field The new size for the VM. The new disk size should be greater than the total provisioned size. Click Resize. Deleting A VM Disk Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the Delete VM Disk option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Delete VM Disk. In the Delete VM Disk dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description VM Name field The name of the selected VM. Select Disk Name drop-down list Choose a hard disk from the drop-down list. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 22 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Resynchronizing a VM Step 3 Click Delete. Resynchronizing a VM Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 To access the Resync VM option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Resync VM. In the Resync VM dialog box, choose the number of minutes from 0 to 30 from the Max Wait Time (minutes) drop-down list. Click Submit. Viewing VM Details This feature allows you to view the details about the VM, such as VM action request, vNICs, VM snapshots, and general summary information. Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the View Details option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click View Details. The Summary screen appears. Launching VM Client This feature lets you set up a remote or a VNC console. The VNC console provides access for each VM. The console provides full control capabilities of the VM. The console is accessible using any standalone web browser and no plug-in is required. Cisco UCS Director provides automatic configuration of the console. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 23 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Enabling the VNC Console on a VM Note • To access the Launch VM Client option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. • You can access a VM's login credential when it is setup for Web or remote desktop access. An administrator must provide the proper catalog (and necessary privileges) from which the VM is provisioned. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Launch VM Client. In the Launch Client dialog box, select an access scheme: Name Description Access Scheme drop-down list Choose an access scheme from the drop-down list. The available schemes are VNC Console and VMRC. Note The VMRC and the VNC Console schemes are available only when it has been enabled. However, in Cisco VACS, the VNC Console is enabled for all the workload VMs during the deployment. Click Proceed. Enabling the VNC Console on a VM Note To access the Configure VNC option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Configure VNC. In the Configure VNC Request dialog box, click Submit. Step 4 Click OK. Cisco UCS Director automatically configures VNC console access to a VM when the request is submitted. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 24 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Testing VNC Connectivity Testing VNC Connectivity Testing VNC connectivity is used for troubleshooting purposes. If the test for VNC connectivity succeeds, the host node IP address and VNC port number displays. For example: VNC connectivity intact at 172.29.110.75:5921. However if connectivity fails, a failure message displays. For example: VM is not configured for VNC yet. Note To access the Test VNC option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Test VNC. In the Test VNC Connectivity dialog box, click Submit. Step 4 Use the result to troubleshoot VNC connectivity. Note If connectivity fails, there is no VNC port assigned to the VM IP address. For more information, see Enabling the VNC Console on a VM, on page 24. Enabling or Disabling VMRC Console Access Web applications running in the browser can use the VMRC browser plug-in to access virtual machine console functions by using the VMRC JavaScript API. With a web application that uses VMRC browser plug-in and the VMRC API, users can remotely access, and interact with, a virtual machine from any system with the appropriate web browser and operating system. Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 To access the Enable/Disable VMRC Console option on a VM, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click Enable/Disable VMRC Console. In the Enable VMRC Console Access dialog box, check the Enable VMRC Console check box to enable the VMRC Console access. Note If the VMRC Console is enabled, the Disable VMRC Console Access dialog box appears. You can check the Disable VMRC Console check box to disable the VMRC Control access. Click Submit, and then click OK. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 25 Performing VM Lifecycle Management Mounting the ISO Image as CD/DVD Drive Mounting the ISO Image as CD/DVD Drive Note Step 1 Step 2 To access the CD/DVD Drive Mount ISO option, the administrator must provide the appropriate permission. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > VMs. Select the appropriate VM and click CD/DVD Drive Mount ISO. In the CD/DVD Drive Mount ISO dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description ISO Image button Click Select to choose the ISO image from the list of available image. In the Select dialog box, select an image, and then click Select. Note If the list of available images is not displayed, contact your administrator. Create New CD/DVD Drive radio button Click the radio button if you want to create a new CD/DVD drive. Use Existing CD/DVD Drive radio button Click the radio button if you want to use an existing CD/DVD drive. Power Off VMcheck box Check the check box to power off the VM. Note Select CD/DVD Drive drop-down list Select the desired drive from the list of available drive(s). Note Step 3 This check box appears only if you choose create a new CD/DVD drive. This drop down list appears only when you choose to use an existing CD/DVD drive Click Submit. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 26 CHAPTER 4 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal This chapter contains the following sections: • Viewing Reports, page 27 • Powering on the Application Container, page 29 • Powering off the Application Container, page 30 • Adding Virtual Machines, page 30 • Deleting Virtual Machines, page 32 • Configuring Static NAT to the Virtual Machines, page 33 • Configuring ERSPAN, page 34 • Managing Firewall Policies, page 35 • Deleting Application Containers, page 40 Viewing Reports The Self-Service Portal provides you an interface to view system generated reports. You can view the following reports based on options provided by your network administrator: 1 When the network administrator allows you to view the Secure Container Details, the following secure reports are available: • Summary Report—Displays the workload VM details. • Detailed Report—Display the VM credentials, in addition to the summary and other details of the VMs that are associated with the selected application container. This report does not display the details of the service VMs. 2 When the network administrator allows you to view all the details, the following reports are available: • Summary—Displays the summary of all the VMs, including the details of the service VMs that are associated with the selected application container. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 27 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Types of Reports • Detailed report with credentials—Display the VM credentials, in addition to the summary and other details of the VMs that are associated with the selected application container. • Detailed report without credentials—Displays the VM details without the credential details. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click View Reports. The View Report dialog box appears. Choose the report type from the Report Type drop-down list. Click Submit. After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays the corresponding report. Types of Reports Attention • To view the login passwords and vnc details for the VMs, see the detailed report with credentials. • The login user for CSR/VSG is admin and for SLB is root. • The default enable password for CSR is cisco123. • The Summary Report and the Detailed Report in the Secure Container details are displayed based on the permissions granted by the administrator. • The contents of the Detailed report depends on whether it is a secure report or a non secure report. Cisco VACS generates the following types of reports for each container that you create: 1 Secure Reports—These reports are displayed based on the permissions granted by the administrator while setting the end user options and they do not display the details of the service VMs. The following secure reports are available: • Summary Report displays the details of the workload VMs. • Detailed Report • Container:Name—displays the container name, container type, the group it belongs to, and the date the template was created. • Virtual Machines—displays the details of the workload VMs. • event history—displays the deployment history. • Virtual Machine Subnet Information—displays the network and gateway IP addresses and the subnet mask. • CSR Uplink Information—information about the CSR 1000V uplink. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 28 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Powering on the Application Container • Static Nat Details—displays Static Nat related information. Note If the network administrator has granted permissions to view the secure container details, the Stats URL displays the VIP IP address instead of the SLB Management IP Address. 2 Unsecure Reports—These reports are displayed based on the permissions granted by the administrator while setting the end user options. The following reports are available: • Summary • Detailed report with credentials • Detailed report without credentials The summary report displays container details such the summary of all the VMs, including the details of the service VMs that are associated with the selected application container. The detailed report (with and without credentails) displays the following information: • Container:Name—displays the container name, container type, the group it belongs to, and the date the template was created. • Virtual Machines—displays consolidated information about all the provisioned VMs and their status in the container, resource consumption details such as disk size, memory, and CPU, details of the network interface, hostname and status, and port mappings for the container. • Container Port Groups—displays details about the container port groups with specific admin credentials. • event history—displays the deployment history. • Server Load Balancing—displays the server load balancing (SLB) primary and secondary virtual machine names, IP addresses, netmask, network gateway, data and management port-groups, Stats URL, Stats username and password, information about the VIP, zone, and real server. • Virtual Machine Subnet Information—displays the network and gateway IP addresses and the subnet mask. • CSR 1000V License Details—displays details about the CSR 1000V virtual appliances deployed by Cisco VACS and the corresponding license states. • CSR Uplink Information—information about the CSR 1000V uplink. • Static Nat Details—displays Static Nat related information. • ERSPAN Details—displays ERSPAN related information. • Upstream Router Configuration Required—This section is displayed when the edge gateway is disabled in a container. Powering on the Application Container Using the Self-Service Portal, you can power on an application container. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 29 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Powering off the Application Container Note • The Power On option is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. • If any VM is powered on in the Secure Report mode, the service VMs are powered on automatically. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Power On Container. The Power On Container dialog box that appears, displays the VMs that have been provisioned. Step 3 Select the VM that you want to power on and click Submit. The Submit Result confirmation box appears. Step 4 Click OK. Powering off the Application Container Using the Self-Service Portal, you can power off an application container. Note • The Power Off option is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. • If any VM is powered off in the Secure Report mode, the service VMs are powered on automatically. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Power Off Container. The Power Off Container dialog box that appears, displays the VMs that have been provisioned. Step 3 Select the VM that you want to power off and click Submit. The Submit Result confirmation box appears. Step 4 Click OK. Adding Virtual Machines Using the Self-Service Portal you can add a virtual machine (VM) exclusively for any of the deployed application containers available for a user in a defined group. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 30 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Adding Virtual Machines Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Add VMs. In the Manage VMs dialog box, complete the following fields: Name Description Security Zone drop-down list Choose a security zone. VM Name field Enter a unique name for the virtual machine, up to 32 characters long. The complete virtual machine name will include the name provided in this field, the zone name and the container name. VM Image drop-down list Choose a virtual machine image to deploy from the list. The list contains the virtual machine templates that are present on the chosen vCloud account. If the list is empty, then the chosen vCloud account does not have any templates. Note 1 The drop-down list shows only the VM templates which are added to one of the hosts on the datacenter where Virtual Machines are deployed. 2 If the drop-down list does not show the added VM templates, you must perform inventory collection to display them : Virtual > Compute > Polling > Request Inventory Collection. Number of Virtual CPUs drop-down list Choose the number of vCPUs that are required for the newly created VM. Memory drop-down list Choose the memory that is required for the newly created VM. VM Password Sharing Option drop-down list Choose the virtual machine password sharing option: • Do not share • Share after password reset • Share template credentials Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 31 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Deleting Virtual Machines Name Description VM Network Interfaces table Note This table is visible only for the custom containers. Choose the virtual machine network interface from the list of interfaces. Click + to add an interface. Note If SLB has been enabled in the template, you must choose at least one virtual machine network interface that is in the same network as that of the SLB. To add an interface, do the following: Name Description VM Network Interface Name field Enter a unique name for the VM network interface. Select the Network drop-down list Choose the network to which the Network Interface Card (NIC) should be attached. Adapter Type drop-down Select the appropriate list adapter type. Click Submit. Number of VM instances field. Step 4 Enter the number of virtual machine instances to provision to an existing container. Click Submit. After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays a service request number that can be used to track the progress of the workflow. Deleting Virtual Machines Using the Self-Service Portal, you can delete workload VMs from a selected application container that has been deployed and the VMs that have been provisioned. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 32 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Configuring Static NAT to the Virtual Machines Note • The Delete VMs option is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. • The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Delete VMs. The Delete VMs dialog box that appears, displays the VMs that have been provisioned. Check the checkbox against the VMs that you choose to delete. and click Submit. After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays a service request number that can be used to track the progress of the Workflow. (Optional) Click Close to cancel the deletion. Configuring Static NAT to the Virtual Machines Static NAT mappings are required for allowing the outside public IP addresses to reach the virtual machines that are inside the container. The static NAT screen allows you to specify the outside public IP address and map it to the private IP address of the virtual machine. Note • The static NAT operation is blocked for containers that do not have the edge gateway enabled. • The static NAT operation is applicable only if the IP type = Private. If you try to configure this feature on a container whose IP type=public, then you will get an error message and cannot proceed with the configuration. • The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. • The option to configure StaticNAT is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Static NAT. In the Static NAT dialog box, check the check box for each provisioned VM that require Static NAT enablement. If none of the workload VMs are provisioned on the container, the Static NAT screen is be empty. If the workload VMs are already provisioned, this screen displays the VMs with check boxes next to each of them. Step 4 Click Submit. Note If Private addressing was specified in the container template, Cisco VACS will provision NAT overloading to allow internal VMs with private addresses to initiate connections to the outside, during the container provisioning. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 33 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Configuring ERSPAN After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays a service request number that can be used to track the progress of the workflow. Configuring ERSPAN Traffic to and from individual virtual machines can be monitored using the encapsulated remote switched port analyzer (ERSPAN) feature after workload virtual machines are provisioned. ERSPAN is generally enabled on a per veth for interface basis for troubleshooting. You must supply an ERSPAN destination for forwarding and analyzing traffic. Use the following procedure to enable ERSPAN for the workload VMs and the SLB VM: Note • The option to configure ERSPAN is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. • The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click ERSPAN. The Cisco VACS ERSPAN Configuration wizard appears. In the ERSPAN Destination IP address Specification screen specify the Destination IP Address for forwarding and analyzing traffic. If ERSPANs are already present, they are displayed in the Destination IP Address Report table in this screen. This table also lists the ERSPAN session ID and the corresponding Destination IP address. Click Next to proceed to the ERSPAN Configuration screen. In the ERSPAN Configuration screen, complete the following details: Name Description VM Name drop-down list Choose the workload VM that you want to monitor. NIC Name drop-down list Choose the VM NIC attached to the workload VM. Rx Tx Both drop-down list Choose the direction of the traffic that you want to monitor. The options are: 1 Receive direction (Rx) 2 Transmit direction (Tx) 3 Both directions (Both) Step 6 Click Submit to add the entry to the VM NIC Configuration table. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 34 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Managing Firewall Policies You can also edit, delete, or move an entry up and down using the respective icons. Click Submit in the ERSPAN Configuration screen to submit the ERSPAN configuration request. The service request is submitted to the workflow to configure the ERSPAN monitoring. Upon successful execution of the workflow, the ERSPAN session will be visible from ERSPAN screen after a few minutes. You can view the status of the service request from the Service Requests screen under the Services Menu. 1 If you want to stop an existing ERSPAN session, check the checkbox corresponding to the Destination IP Note address and Session ID, delete the VM NIC configuration, and click Submit. 2 You cannot change the session ID and the session type (Rx, Tx, or Both) when a session is configured through the ERSPAN configuration. To change these details, you must first delete the session and then create a new session. Note Step 7 Step 8 Click Submit. After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays a service request number that can be used to track the progress of the workflow. Managing Firewall Policies Cisco Virtual Application Container Services (Cisco VACS) allows you to modify existing firewall access control lists (ACLs) rules for each container that is already deployed. This includes adding new ACL rules and modifying or deleting existing ACL rules. In a firewall policy, you can change only the ACLs that are defined for a container. You cannot add new zones or modify existing zones. Note • This option is not functional if the zone security for tiers (VSG) is not enabled in the template from which the container was deployed. • Use this procedure to modify existing firewall access control lists (ACLs) rules for the deployed containers. To modify firewall ACL rules for templates, you must use the PNSC Firewall Policies tab available at Physical > Network > Multi-Domain Manager > PNSC Accounts. For more information, see the Viewing and Editing the ACLs for the 3 Tier Templates section in the Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Configuration Guide. • The Help link available within the wizard provides you access to the corresponding online help. Viewing Firewall ACL Rules You can view existing ACL rules associated with a firewall policy that is defined for a container. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 35 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Adding Firewall ACL Rules Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resource > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Firewall Policy. The Edit Firewall dialog box appears. The PNSC Firewall Specification screen displays the policy name and description. Click Next. The PNSC-ACL Rules screen appears. You can view the existing PNSC ACL rules. Adding Firewall ACL Rules You can add new ACL rules to a firewall policy that is defined for a container. Note • The option to add firewall ACL rules is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. • The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resource > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Firewall Policy. The Edit Firewall dialog box appears. The PNSC Firewall Specification screen displays the policy name and description. Click Next. The PNSC-ACL Rules screen appears. Step 4 In the PNSC-ACL Rules screen, click the + icon to add a new PNSC ACL rule. The Add Entry to PNSC ACL Rules screen appears. Step 5 In the Add Entry to PNSC ACL Rules screen, complete the following fields: Name Description Name field Enter a unique name for the PNSC ACL rule. This name can be an alpha-numeric and special character set between 2-32 characters long. Description field Enter a description for the PNSC ACL rule. This description can be less than or equal to 256 characters long. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 36 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Adding Firewall ACL Rules Name Description Action drop-down list Choose an action to take if the rule conditions are not met. The available options are: • Drop—Drops traffic or denies access. • Permit—Forwards traffic or allows access. • Reset—Resets the connection. Condition Match Criteria drop-down list Choose the condition match criteria. The available options are: • Choose match-all for the ACL Policy Rule to match all the conditions (AND). • Choose match-any for the ACL Policy Rule to match any one condition (OR). Protocol/Service drop-down list Choose between protocol or service. Service table In a given protocol if you want to specify any application service related port number to be opened, then you must choose this . Currently, Cisco UCS Directors supports http and https. Note This option appears if you choose Service. To add a service, click the + icon to add an entry to the service table and complete the following fields: • From the Operator drop-down list. choose the operator. The available options are: Equals and Not equals. • From the Protocol drop-down list. choose the protocol. • From the Service drop-down list, choose the service. The available options are: http and https. • In the Port field, enter the application service related port number. • Click Submit to add the entry to the list of zone conditions. You can edit or delete an existing service. Any Protocol check box To apply the rule to any protocol, check the Any check box. Note This option appears if you choose Protocol. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 37 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Editing Firewall ACL Rules Name Description Source Conditions table Click the + icon to add an entry to the source conditions table and complete the following fields: • From the Attribute Type drop-down list, choose the attribute : Network, VM, or Zone. • From the Attribute Name drop-down list, choose the name. • From the Operator drop-down list, choose the operator : Range or Equals or Not Equals or Prefixed by or Range. • In the Attribute Value field, enter the corresponding value. • Click Submit to add the entry to the list of zone conditions. Destination Conditions table Click the + icon to add an entry to the destination conditions table and complete the following fields: • From the Attribute Type drop-down list, choose the attribute : Network, VM, or Zone. • From the Attribute Name drop-down list, choose the name. • From the Operator drop-down list, choose the operator : Range or Equals or Not Equals or Prefixed by or Range. • In the Attribute Value field, enter the corresponding value. • Click Submit to add the entry to the list of zone conditions. The new ACL rule is added to the list of zone conditions and is listed at the end of the existing list. Step 6 Step 7 Click the Up arrow icon to move the newly created ACL rule in an ascending order. Click Submit. Editing Firewall ACL Rules Cisco Virtual Application Container Services (Cisco VACS) allows you to modify existing firewall ACL rules. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 38 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Deleting Firewall ACL Rules Note • Use this procedure to modify existing firewall access control lists (ACLs) rules for the deployed containers. To modify firewall ACL rules for templates, you must use the PNSC Firewall Policies tab available at Physical > Network > Multi-Domain Manager > PNSC Accounts. For more information, see Viewing and Editing the ACLs for the 3 Tier Templates. • The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resource > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Firewall Policy. The Edit Firewall dialog box appears. The PNSC Firewall Specification screen displays the policy name and description. Click Next. The PNSC-ACL Rules screen appears. Step 4 In the PNSC-ACL Rules screen, select the PNSC ACL rule that you want to edit, and click the edit (pencil) icon. The Edit Entry to PNSC ACL Rules screen appears. Step 5 In the Edit Entry to PNSC ACL Rules screen, modify the corresponding fields, and click submit. Step 6 Step 7 Click the Up or down arrow icon to move the modified ACL rule in an ascending or descending order. Click Submit. Deleting Firewall ACL Rules Cisco Virtual Application Container Services (Cisco VACS) allows you to delete existing ACL rules. Note Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 The Help link provides you access to the corresponding online help. On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resource > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Firewall Policy. The Edit Firewall dialog box appears. The PNSC Firewall Specification screen displays the policy name and description. Click Next. The PNSC-ACL Rules screen appears. Step 4 In the PNSC-ACL Rules screen, click the delete (x) icon to delete an existing PNSC ACL rule. The Delete PNSC ACL Rules Entry confirmation box appears. Step 5 Click Submit to delete the selected PNSC ACL rule. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 39 Working with the Cisco VACS Self-Service Portal Deleting Application Containers Deleting Application Containers Using the Self-Service Portal you can delete any of the deployed application containers. When you delete an application container, all the associated resources are deleted automatically. Note The Delete Container option is available based on the permission granted by the administrator. Step 1 Step 2 On the menu bar, choose Virtual Resources > Application Containers. Select the appropriate Application Container and click Delete Container. The Delete Container dialog box confirming the deletion appears. Step 3 Click Submit to proceed with the deletion. After clicking Submit, a pop-up window that appears , displays a service request number that can be used to track the progress of the workflow. Step 4 (Optional) Click Close to cancel the deletion. Note If the delete container workflow fails, then trace the container deployment service request and Issue a 'Rollback Request' to complete/clean-up the failed deletion. Cisco Virtual Application Container Services Self-Service Portal User Guide, Release 5.3STV2.0.1 40
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