The OCID of the Capacity Reservation.
The OCID of the compartment that contains the Cluster.
The availability domain the ESXi hosts are running in. For Multi-AD Cluster, it is {@code multi-AD}.
Example: {@code Uocm:PHX-AD-1}, {@code multi-AD}
Datastores used for the Cluster.
Defined tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags.
Example: {@code {\"Operations\": {\"CostCenter\": \"42\"}}}
A descriptive name for the Cluster. It must be unique, start with a letter, and contain only letters, digits, whitespaces, dashes and underscores. Avoid entering confidential information.
The number of ESXi hosts in the Cluster. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
In general, this is a specific version of bundled ESXi software supported by Oracle Cloud VMware Solution (see {@link #listSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersions(ListSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersionsRequest) listSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersions}).
This attribute is not guaranteed to reflect the version of software currently installed on the ESXi hosts in the SDDC. The purpose of this attribute is to show the version of software that the Oracle Cloud VMware Solution will install on any new ESXi hosts that you *add to this SDDC in the future* with {@link #createEsxiHost(CreateEsxiHostRequest) createEsxiHost} unless a different version is configured on the ESXi host level.
Therefore, if you upgrade the existing ESXi hosts in the Cluster to use a newer version of bundled ESXi software supported by the Oracle Cloud VMware Solution, you should use {@link #updateCluster(UpdateClusterRequest) updateCluster} to update the Cluster's {@code esxiSoftwareVersion} with that new version.
Free-form tags for this resource. Each tag is a simple key-value pair with no predefined name, type, or namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags.
Example: {@code {\"Department\": \"Finance\"}}
The OCID of the Cluster.
The billing option selected during Cluster creation. {@link #listSupportedCommitments(ListSupportedCommitmentsRequest) listSupportedCommitments}.
The initial OCPU count of the Cluster's ESXi hosts. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
The initial compute shape of the Cluster's ESXi hosts. {@link #listSupportedHostShapes(ListSupportedHostShapesRequest) listSupportedHostShapes}.
A prefix used in the name of each ESXi host and Compute instance in the Cluster. If this isn't set, the Cluster's {@code displayName} is used as the prefix.
For example, if the value is {@code MyCluster}, the ESXi hosts are named {@code MyCluster-1}, {@code MyCluster-2}, and so on.
Indicates whether shielded instance is enabled at the Cluster level.
The current state of the Cluster.
The OCID of the SDDC that the Cluster belongs to.
Usage of system tag keys. These predefined keys are scoped to namespaces. Example: {@code {orcl-cloud: {free-tier-retain: true}}}
The date and time the Cluster was created, in the format defined by RFC3339.
Example: {@code 2016-08-25T21:10:29.600Z}
The date and time the Cluster was updated, in the format defined by RFC3339.
The vSphere licenses to use when upgrading the Cluster.
In general, this is a specific version of bundled VMware software supported by Oracle Cloud VMware Solution (see {@link #listSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersions(ListSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersionsRequest) listSupportedVmwareSoftwareVersions}).
This attribute is not guaranteed to reflect the version of software currently installed on the ESXi hosts in the Cluster. The purpose of this attribute is to show the version of software that the Oracle Cloud VMware Solution will install on any new ESXi hosts that you *add to this Cluster in the future* with {@link #createEsxiHost(CreateEsxiHostRequest) createEsxiHost}.
Therefore, if you upgrade the existing ESXi hosts in the Cluster to use a newer version of bundled VMware software supported by the Oracle Cloud VMware Solution, you should use {@link #updateCluster(UpdateClusterRequest) updateCluster} to update the Cluster's {@code vmwareSoftwareVersion} with that new version.
vSphere Cluster types.
The links to binary objects needed to upgrade vSphere.
The CIDR block for the IP addresses that VMware VMs in the SDDC use to run application workloads.
An Oracle Cloud VMware Solution Cluster contains the resources required for a functional VMware environment. Instances in a Cluster (see EsxiHost) run in a virtual cloud network (VCN) and are preconfigured with VMware and storage. Use the vCenter utility to manage and deploy VMware virtual machines (VMs) in the Cluster.
The Cluster uses a single management subnet for provisioning the Cluster. It also uses a set of VLANs for various components of the VMware environment (vSphere, vMotion, vSAN, and so on). See the Core Services API for information about VCN subnets and VLANs.