Virtualization
Clusters
A cluster is a logical grouping of physical resources within which virtual machines run. A cluster must be assigned a type (technological classification), and may optionally be assigned to a cluster group, site, and/or tenant. Each cluster must have a unique name within its assigned group and/or site, if any.
Physical devices may be associated with clusters as hosts. This allows users to track on which host(s) a particular virtual machine may reside. However, NetBox does not support pinning a specific VM within a cluster to a particular host device.
Cluster Types
A cluster type represents a technology or mechanism by which a cluster is formed. For example, you might create a cluster type named "VMware vSphere" for a locally hosted cluster or "DigitalOcean NYC3" for one hosted by a cloud provider.
Cluster Groups
Cluster groups may be created for the purpose of organizing clusters. The arrangement of clusters into groups is optional.
Virtual Machines
A virtual machine represents a virtual compute instance hosted within a cluster. Each VM must be assigned to exactly one cluster.
Like devices, each VM can be assigned a platform and/or functional role, and must have one of the following operational statuses assigned to it:
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Active
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Offline
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Planned
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Staged
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Failed
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Decommissioning
Additional fields are available for annotating the vCPU count, memory (GB), and disk (GB) allocated to each VM. A VM may be allocated a partial vCPU count (e.g. 1.5 vCPU).
Each VM may optionally be assigned to a tenant. Virtual machines may have virtual interfaces assigned to them, but do not support any physical component.
Interfaces
Virtual machine interfaces behave similarly to device interfaces, and can be assigned to VRFs, and may have IP addresses, VLANs, and services attached to them. However, given their virtual nature, they lack properties pertaining to physical attributes. For example, VM interfaces do not have a physical type and cannot have cables attached to them.