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g. Click the Virtual Thumbnail for more details.

h. On the resulting screen click the expand all icon.

i. The text highlighted in red shows exactly which checks fail compliance.
7. Explore infrastructure VM utilization:
. Select Compute → Infrastructure → Virtual Machines, and then select a the VM named ansible-
tower .

a.
b. Set Interval to Daily and Date to 8/1/2017.
c. Examine the screen that appears, showing a detailed report of CPU, memory, disk I/O, and network:
 To see a specific data point, hover over any chart.
 To zoom in on a chart, click (Zoom In) in the lower left corner of the chart.
 To modify the timeframe displayed in the report, select the date range at the top of the screen.

The data in this demo is frozen, so you may not be able to go beyond the date specified.

8. Explore an infrastructure VM’s power state control:


. On the left, select the VMs accordion.
a. Select All VMs.
b. Click the VM named ansible-container .
c. At the top click the Power icon.

. Note that is available since the VM is currently powered off.

This demo environment is not connected to any active providers, so changing the power state

will not affect anything.

3.6. Examine Infrastructure Provisioning


1. Select Compute → Infrastructure → Virtual Machines.
2. On the left, in the VMs accordion, select All VMs.

3. On the right, click .

4. Select (Provision VMs), and observe the following:


o You are provided with a list of templates.
o The Provider column shows some templates are from Red Hat Virtualization and others are from
VMware.
5. Select any template and click Continue.
6. On the resulting page, perform the step indicated below for each tab and look at the data requested.
a. In the Request tab, fill out all the fields.
b. In the Catalog tab, set the VM Name.

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