Tag Archives: python

pyVmomi tutorial : How to get all the core vCenter server inventory objects and play around?

Recently I posted about “how did I get started with pyvmomi?”. I continued exploring this further and I thought to share my learning so far. After setting up the pyvmomi environment, first thing I wanted to learn was to get hold of all core vCenter inventory objects so that I can play around each of them. vCenter core inventory includes objects such as Datacenters, Clusters, Virtual Machines, Hosts, Datastores & Networks etc.
As an initial step, I was looking for a way to get below objects from VC inventory
-All Virtual Machines
-All Clusters
-All Hosts
-All Datacenters

There could be multiple ways to get above objects but below is the way I could achieve this.

[python]
from pyVim.connect import SmartConnect
from pyVmomi import vim
import ssl

# Get all the Vms from vCenter server inventory and print its name
# Below is Python 2.7.x code, which can be easily converted to python 3.x version

s=ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1)
s.verify_mode=ssl.CERT_NONE
si= SmartConnect(host="10.192.3.2", user="[email protected]", pwd="$h1vKamal",sslContext=s)
content=si.content

# Method that populates objects of type vimtype
def get_all_objs(content, vimtype):
obj = {}
container = content.viewManager.CreateContainerView(content.rootFolder, vimtype, True)
for managed_object_ref in container.view:
obj.update({managed_object_ref: managed_object_ref.name})
return obj

#Calling above method
getAllVms=get_all_objs(content, [vim.VirtualMachine])

#Iterating each vm object and printing its name
for vm in getAllVms:
print vm.name
[/python]

Output:
vmware@localhost:~$ python getAllVms.py
Database-server
NTP-Bangalore
Web-server
NTP-Pune
vmware@localhost:~$

You could see above, script listed all the VMs available in inventory. Let us look at another example, here we will get all the clusters from vCenter Inventory.

[python]
from pyVim.connect import SmartConnect
from pyVmomi import vim
import ssl

#Get all the Clusters from vCenter invetory and printing its name
#Below is Python 2.7.x code, which can be easily converted to python 3.x version

s=ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1)
s.verify_mode=ssl.CERT_NONE
si= SmartConnect(host="10.192.3.2", user="[email protected]", pwd="$h1vKamal",sslContext=s)
content=si.content

# Method that populates objects of type vimtype
def get_all_objs(content, vimtype):
obj = {}
container = content.viewManager.CreateContainerView(content.rootFolder, vimtype, True)
for managed_object_ref in container.view:
obj.update({managed_object_ref: managed_object_ref.name})
return obj

#Calling above method
clusters=get_all_objs(content, [vim.ClusterComputeResource])

#Iterating each cluster object and printing its name
for cluster in clusters:
print (cluster.name)
[/python]

Output:
vmware@localhost:~$ python getClusters.py
DRSCluster-USA
DRSCluster-Europe
DRSCluster-India
vmware@localhost:~$

If you notice, only important change from getAllVms and getClusters script is line #22, is not it cool? So now we were able to get all the VMs as well as all the clusters. Similarly we can get other core inventory objects such as datacenter, hosts, datastores, networks etc. Below is how line #22 will look for other vCenter/ESXi objects.

[python]
# For ESXi host
hosts=get_all_objs(content, [vim.HostSystem])

#For datacenters
dcs = get_all_objs(content, [vim.Datacenter])

#For datastores
datastores = get_all_objs(content, [vim.Datastore])
[/python]

By now we know how to get hold of vSphere inventory objects, let’s do something meaningful with these objects. I chose to call a method on one of clusters that we retrieved above. What is that method?
vCenter 6.0 has introduced one of interesting APIs on vSphere DRS cluster rules. i.e. findRulesForVM(). This method is called on individual cluster and it returns set of DRS VM-VM affinity rules (enabled or disabled) those are associated with given/input VM. Since this method returns VM-VM affinity rules, I first created some VM-VM rules on one of my clusters as follows.

Cluster with DRS enabled
DRS VM-VM rules

Now that DRS rules are created, let us pass VM name as parameter to “findRulesForVM()” API and call this API on that cluster.

Updated code is available on VMware sample exchange portal here

[python]
from pyVim.connect import SmartConnect
from pyVmomi import vim
import ssl
#Get DRS VM-VM rules associated with a VM.

s=ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1)
s.verify_mode=ssl.CERT_NONE
si= SmartConnect(host="10.192.3.2", user="[email protected]", pwd="$vabc325pqr",sslContext=s)
content=si.content

def get_all_objs(content, vimtype):
obj = {}
container = content.viewManager.CreateContainerView(content.rootFolder, vimtype, True)
for managed_object_ref in container.view:
obj.update({managed_object_ref: managed_object_ref.name})
return obj

# Scanning a input VM inside inventory using special python construct i.e. List comprehension
# It will get all the Vms and check whether input VM is available inside inventory or not, finally it returns list with matching condition

vmToScan = [vm for vm in get_all_objs(content,[vim.VirtualMachine]) if "NTP-Bangalore" == vm.name]

# Scanning a input cluster inside invetory the way we did for VM above. here also we used list comprehension.

cluster = [cluster for cluster in get_all_objs(content,[vim.ClusterComputeResource]) if "DRSCluster-India" == cluster.name]

# Now we can call the method on input cluster by passing input VM as parameter, it returns array of rule objects associated with input VM.
ClusterRuleInfo=cluster[0].FindRulesForVm(vmToScan[0])

# Now iterate through rule objects and print the rule name

for rule in ClusterRuleInfo:
print rule.name

[/python]

Output:
vmware@localhost:~$ python findRules.py
Anti-Affine-NTP-Servers
Affine-Web-DB-Servers

Here is how vSphere web client “recent task” looks, you could see “Find Rules for vms” task.

Notes:
-For the sake of simplicity, I have hard-coded some values and simplified the code, please make changes as per your requirement.
-I have added required documentation inside above code itself.
-This code follows mostly python 2.7.x version, please make minor changes to work with python 3.x

If you need any help, please let me know and yes, please stay tuned for my upcoming blog posts on pyVmomi.