######################################### # ESXI Provider host/login details ######################################### # # Use of variables here to hide/move the variables to a separate file # provider "esxi" { esxi_hostname = var.esxi_hostname esxi_hostport = var.esxi_hostport esxi_username = var.esxi_username esxi_password = var.esxi_password } ######################################### # ESXI Guest resource ######################################### # # This Guest VM is a clone of an existing Guest VM named "centos7" (must exist and # be powered off), located in the "Templates" resource pool. vmtest02 will be powered # on by default by terraform. The virtual network "VM Network", must already exist on # your esxi host! # # https://github.com/josenk/vagrant-vmware-esxi/wiki/VMware-ESXi-6.5-guestOS-types resource "esxi_guest" "dc" { guest_name = "dc" disk_store = "datastore2" guestos = "windows9srv-64" boot_disk_type = "thin" boot_disk_size = "35" memsize = "2048" numvcpus = "2" resource_pool_name = "/" power = "on" # clone_from_vm uses ovftool to clone an existing Guest on your esxi host. This example will clone a Guest VM named "centos7", located in the "Templates" resource pool. # ovf_source uses ovftool to produce a clone from an ovf or vmx image. (typically produced using the ovf_tool). # Basically clone_from_vm clones from sources on the esxi host and ovf_source clones from sources on your local hard disk or a URL. # These two options are mutually exclusive. clone_from_vm = "WindowsServer2016" network_interfaces { virtual_network = var.vm_network mac_address = "00:50:56:a1:b1:c2" nic_type = "e1000" } network_interfaces { virtual_network = var.nat_network } guest_startup_timeout = 45 guest_shutdown_timeout = 30 } resource "esxi_guest" "wef" { guest_name = "wef" disk_store = "datastore2" guestos = "windows9srv-64" boot_disk_type = "thin" boot_disk_size = "35" memsize = "2048" numvcpus = "2" resource_pool_name = "/" power = "on" # clone_from_vm uses ovftool to clone an existing Guest on your esxi host. This example will clone a Guest VM named "centos7", located in the "Templates" r$ # ovf_source uses ovftool to produce a clone from an ovf or vmx image. (typically produced using the ovf_tool). # Basically clone_from_vm clones from sources on the esxi host and ovf_source clones from sources on your local hard disk or a URL. # These two options are mutually exclusive. clone_from_vm = "WindowsServer2016" network_interfaces { virtual_network = "var.vm_network" mac_address = "00:50:56:a1:b1:c3" nic_type = "e1000" } network_interfaces { virtual_network = "var.nat_network" } guest_startup_timeout = 45 guest_shutdown_timeout = 30 } resource "esxi_guest" "win10" { guest_name = "win10" disk_store = "datastore2" guestos = "windows9-64" boot_disk_type = "thin" boot_disk_size = "35" memsize = "2048" numvcpus = "2" resource_pool_name = "/" power = "on" # clone_from_vm uses ovftool to clone an existing Guest on your esxi host. This example will clone a Guest VM named "centos7", located in the "Templates" r$ # ovf_source uses ovftool to produce a clone from an ovf or vmx image. (typically produced using the ovf_tool). # Basically clone_from_vm clones from sources on the esxi host and ovf_source clones from sources on your local hard disk or a URL. # These two options are mutually exclusive. clone_from_vm = "Windows10" network_interfaces { virtual_network = "var.vm_network" mac_address = "00:50:56:a1:b1:c4" nic_type = "e1000" } network_interfaces { virtual_network = "var.nat_network" } guest_startup_timeout = 45 guest_shutdown_timeout = 30 }