Data Object - AutoStartPowerInfo(vim.host.AutoStartManager.AutoPowerInfo)

Property of
HostAutoStartManagerConfig
Extends
DynamicData
See also
AutoStartWaitHeartbeatSetting, VirtualMachine
Since
2.0

Data Object Description

This object type describes the power-on / power-off behavior for a given virtual machine. Virtual machines can be configured to wait for a period of time before starting or to wait to receive a successful heartbeat from a virtual machine before starting the next virtual machine in the sequence. If startAction and stopAction for a virtual machine are both set to none, that virtual machine is removed from the AutoStart sequence. Virtual machines can be configured both to wait for a period of time before starting and to wait for a heartbeat. In such a case, the waiting virtual machine only waits until either of these conditions are met. In other words, a virtual machine starts in either of the following cases: This provides a better experience since as soon as one virtual machine begins sending heartbeats, indicating it has successfully started up, the next machine will begin starting up. This happens even if the startDelay has not yet elapsed. Similarly, if one virtual machine fails to begin sending heartbeats, perhaps because it could not start up, other machines are not blocked from starting up since the startDelay eventually elapses.

Properties

Name Type Description
keyManagedObjectReference
to a VirtualMachine

Virtual machine to power on or power off.
startActionxsd:string

How to start the virtual machine. Valid settings are none or powerOn. If set to none, then the virtual machine does not participate in auto-start.
startDelayxsd:int

Delay in seconds before continuing with the next virtual machine in the order of machines to be started. If the delay is specified as -1, then the system default is used.
startOrderxsd:int

The autostart priority of this virtual machine. Virtual machines with a lower number are powered on first. On host shutdown, the virtual machines are shut down in reverse order, meaning those with a higher number are powered off first.

Positive values indicate a start order and -1 indicates the machine can be powered on at any time. Machines with a -1 value are typically powered on and off after all virtual machines with positive startOrder values. Failure to meet the following requirements results in an InvalidArgument exception:

  • startOrder must be set to -1 if startAction is set to none
  • startOrder must be -1 or positive integers. Values such as 0 or -2 are not valid.
  • startOrder is relative to other virtual machines in the autostart sequence. Hence specifying a startOrder of 4 when there are only 3 virtual machines in the Autostart sequence is not valid.

If a newly established or changed startOrder value for a virtual machine matches an existing startOrder value, the newly applied value takes precedence, and the existing value is incremented by one. The incremented startOrder value is checked for collisions, and the same rule is applied if one is found. This simple system ensures no two virtual machines ever have the same order number.

For example, consider the case where there are three virtual machines with different startOrder values. Virtual machine A has not yet established a startOrder, virtual machine B has a startOrder value of 1 and Virtual Machine C has a startOrder value of 2. If virtual machine A's startOrder is set to 1, then virtual machine B's startOrder is incremented to 2. This creates a conflict with virtual machine C's startOrder value, which is also incremented, this time to 3.

stopActionxsd:string

Defines the stop action for the virtual machine. Can be set to none, systemDefault, powerOff, or suspend. If set to none, then the virtual machine does not participate in auto-stop.
stopDelayxsd:int

Delay in seconds before continuing with the next virtual machine in the order sequence. If the delay is -1, then the system default is used.
waitForHeartbeatAutoStartWaitHeartbeatSetting


Properties inherited from DynamicData
None

Show WSDL type definition