VCP-VCF Administrator Study Guide & Cheat Sheet

A free study guide for the VCP-VCF Administrator exam (2V0-17.25) — exam facts, the domain breakdown, study tips, a topic cheat sheet, and a full glossary. No sign-up needed.

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VCP-VCF Administrator (2V0-17.25) Exam Guide

Questions60 questions, mostly multiple-choice and multiple-response
Time limit135 minutes appointment time (includes onboarding; non-native English speakers may receive extra time where offered)
PriceApproximately $250 USD (varies by region/taxes)
DeliveryPearson VUE, proctored — at a test center or online proctored
ScoringScaled scoring method; passing score of 300 (scale not equal to a raw percentage)
ValidityBroadcom does not publish a fixed expiry for this version — check the current Broadcom certification policy
PrerequisitesNo formal prerequisite; recommended ~1 year of IT experience plus ~6 months working with VCF or its components
LanguageEnglish

Exam domains

DomainWeightWhat it covers
Private Cloud Vision6%The business and architectural rationale for a private cloud built on VMware Cloud Foundation 9.0 — the unified full-stack model (compute, storage, networking, automation, operations) and how VCF delivers cloud agility on-premises with consistent operations and a single SDDC lifecycle.
Compute Fundamentals12%Core vSphere compute concepts in VCF 9.0: the ESX hypervisor, vCenter, vSphere clusters, and features such as HA, DRS, vMotion, and resource pools that underpin every management and workload domain.
Storage Fundamentals14%vSAN as the principal VCF storage: ESA versus OSA architectures, Storage Policy-Based Management (SPBM), Failures To Tolerate (FTT), deduplication/compression, plus supplemental and external storage options for workload domains.
Network Fundamentals12%NSX networking and the underlying vSphere Distributed Switch (vDS): overlay/Geneve segments, Tier-0/Tier-1 gateways, static and dynamic routing, NAT, load balancing, and the Distributed Firewall (DFW) for micro-segmentation.
VCF Deploy & Configure15%Standing up VCF 9.0 with the VCF Installer (bring-up): deploying the management domain, creating VI/workload domains and vSphere clusters, host commissioning, and establishing the foundational SDDC configuration.
VCF Manage11%Day-2 administration of the VCF fleet: certificate, license, and password management, identity/RBAC via VCF Identity Broker, lifecycle and upgrades, host add/remove, and importing existing vCenters into VCF.
VCF Operations16%Monitoring, troubleshooting, and optimizing the environment with VCF Operations, VCF Operations for Logs, VCF Operations for Networks, VCF Fleet Management, and VCF Health and Diagnostics — capacity, performance, alerting, and log/network analytics.
VCF Consume & Automate14%Self-service consumption with VCF Automation: Regions, multi-org tenancy, provider/org networking, content libraries, governance policies, extensibility, and provisioning Kubernetes via vSphere Supervisor.

Who it’s for: VMware administrators and cloud-infrastructure engineers who install, configure, manage, and troubleshoot a VMware Cloud Foundation 9.0 private cloud.

Study & test-day tips

  • Learn VCF 9.0 product names cold — the exam uses current branding (ESX not ESXi, VCF Operations not Aria Operations, VCF Operations for Logs not Log Insight, VCF Automation not vRealize/Aria Automation). Legacy 5.x/Aria/vRealize names in answer options are common distractors.
  • Memorize the vSAN ESA vs OSA distinction: ESA is single-tier, all-NVMe, no separate cache/capacity disk groups, with compression-per-object and better default RAID-5/6 efficiency; OSA uses disk groups with a dedicated cache tier. Know which features require ESA.
  • Master SPBM and FTT math: FTT=1 with RAID-1 mirroring needs 2 copies + witness; RAID-5 needs 4 hosts (FTT=1), RAID-6 needs 6 hosts (FTT=2). Expect questions tying host count to a chosen storage policy.
  • Know the VCF domain model precisely — exactly one management domain runs the SDDC managers/operations stack, while VI/workload domains run tenant workloads. Be clear on what bring-up via the VCF Installer creates versus what you add later.
  • Drill NSX gateway hierarchy: Tier-0 gateways handle north-south/upstream routing (BGP/static), Tier-1 gateways handle tenant/segment routing and connect down to overlay segments; the DFW enforces micro-segmentation independent of network topology.
  • Understand which VCF Operations component answers a given question: Operations for capacity/performance/health, Operations for Logs for log analytics, Operations for Networks for flow/path visibility, Fleet Management for multi-instance lifecycle. Scenario questions hinge on picking the right tool.
  • Study VCF Automation tenancy: the difference between provider and org (tenant) constructs, Regions, provider vs org networking, content libraries, and governance/extensibility — expect scenarios about isolating tenants and applying policy.
  • Know lifecycle and upgrade ordering and that VCF coordinates fleet-wide LCM; understand certificate, license, and password rotation workflows and where VCF Identity Broker fits for identity federation and RBAC.
  • Because scoring is scaled to 300 (not a raw percentage), don't try to back-calculate how many you can miss — answer every question (no penalty for guessing) and flag-and-review uncertain ones within the 135-minute window.
  • Practice reading multi-response questions carefully — note exactly how many answers are required, eliminate legacy-named and version-mismatched options first, and watch for VCF 9.0-specific behaviors (e.g., importing existing vCenters, vSphere Supervisor for Kubernetes) that differ from older releases.

Cheat sheet

Compute (vCenter / ESX / clusters)

  • ESX is the VCF 9.0 hypervisor (renamed from ESXi); vCenter provides centralized management of clusters and hosts.
  • vSphere clusters enable HA (restart VMs on host failure), DRS (load balancing via vMotion), and EVC for CPU compatibility.
  • vMotion = live VM migration; Storage vMotion = live datastore migration; both are zero-downtime.
  • Each VCF domain (management or workload) has its own vCenter; the management domain is deployed first during bring-up.
  • Hosts are commissioned into the VCF inventory before being assigned to a cluster/workload domain.

Storage (vSAN)

  • vSAN ESA: single-tier all-NVMe, no disk groups, per-object compression, efficient RAID-5/6 — the modern default in VCF 9.0.
  • vSAN OSA: legacy disk-group model with separate cache + capacity tiers.
  • SPBM (Storage Policy-Based Management) assigns availability/performance rules per VM or object.
  • FTT defines failures tolerated: RAID-1 mirror (FTT=1) needs ~2 hosts + witness; RAID-5 needs 4; RAID-6 (FTT=2) needs 6.
  • Space efficiency: deduplication and compression reduce capacity usage (ESA does compression by default).
  • vSAN is the principal VCF storage; external/supplemental storage can be added to workload domains.

Networking (NSX)

  • NSX overlays run on a vSphere Distributed Switch (vDS); Geneve encapsulation carries overlay segment traffic.
  • Tier-0 gateway = north-south / upstream routing (BGP or static) to the physical fabric.
  • Tier-1 gateway = tenant/segment routing, connects overlay segments and links up to a Tier-0.
  • Distributed Firewall (DFW) enforces micro-segmentation at the vNIC, independent of topology.
  • NSX also provides NAT and load balancing for north-south and east-west services.
  • Edge nodes/clusters host centralized services (T0 routing, NAT, LB).

Deploy & bring-up

  • VCF Installer performs bring-up, deploying the management domain (SDDC managers + operations stack) first.
  • After bring-up, create VI/workload domains and additional vSphere clusters for tenant workloads.
  • Hosts must be commissioned (validated, added to inventory) before cluster assignment.
  • Existing vCenters can be imported into VCF 9.0 rather than only greenfield deployment.
  • vSphere Supervisor enables Kubernetes (Tanzu/Supervisor) on a cluster for modern apps.

Manage & lifecycle

  • VCF coordinates fleet-wide lifecycle management (LCM) — upgrades/patches across the SDDC stack in a supported order.
  • Certificate management: issue/replace certs across components from a central workflow.
  • License and password management are handled centrally for the fleet.
  • VCF Identity Broker provides identity federation and RBAC for the platform.
  • Add/remove hosts and expand clusters as day-2 operations through SDDC management.

Operations & automation

  • VCF Operations (was Aria Operations): capacity, performance, health, alerting, optimization.
  • VCF Operations for Logs (was Log Insight): centralized log aggregation and analytics.
  • VCF Operations for Networks (was vRealize Network Insight): flow analysis, path/topology, security planning.
  • VCF Fleet Management + VCF Health and Diagnostics: multi-instance oversight and proactive health checks.
  • VCF Automation (was Aria/vRealize Automation): self-service catalog, Regions, multi-org tenancy, governance, extensibility.
  • Tenancy: provider constructs vs org (tenant) constructs, with provider/org networking and content libraries.

Glossary

VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF)
VMware's integrated full-stack private-cloud platform that bundles compute, storage, networking, automation, and operations with unified lifecycle management. Version 9.0 is the basis for the 2V0-17.25 exam.
ESX
VMware's bare-metal hypervisor in VCF 9.0 (formerly named ESXi) that runs virtual machines on physical hosts.
vCenter
The centralized management server for ESX hosts and clusters, providing features like HA, DRS, and vMotion. Each VCF domain has its own vCenter.
Management domain
The first VCF domain deployed during bring-up; it runs the SDDC management and operations components that control the entire environment.
VI / workload domain
A logically isolated VCF domain (with its own vCenter and clusters) created to run tenant or production workloads separately from management.
vSphere cluster
A group of ESX hosts managed as a single pool of compute and storage, enabling HA, DRS, and shared vSAN datastores.
vSphere HA
High Availability — automatically restarts virtual machines on surviving hosts when a host or VM fails.
vSphere DRS
Distributed Resource Scheduler — balances VM workloads across cluster hosts using vMotion based on resource demand.
vMotion
Live migration of a running VM from one host to another with no downtime; Storage vMotion does the same for the VM's datastore.
vSAN
VMware's software-defined storage that pools local host disks into a shared datastore; the principal storage layer for VCF.
vSAN ESA
Express Storage Architecture — a single-tier, all-NVMe vSAN design without disk groups, offering efficient RAID-5/6 and default per-object compression.
vSAN OSA
Original Storage Architecture — the legacy vSAN design using disk groups with a separate cache tier and capacity tier.
SPBM
Storage Policy-Based Management — assigns availability and performance requirements (such as FTT and RAID type) to VMs or objects through policies.
FTT
Failures To Tolerate — the number of host/device failures a vSAN object can survive, which together with the RAID type drives the minimum host count.
Deduplication & compression
vSAN space-efficiency features that remove duplicate blocks and compress data to reduce capacity consumption; ESA performs compression by default.
NSX
VMware's software-defined networking and security platform providing overlay segments, gateways, routing, NAT, load balancing, and firewalling in VCF.
vSphere Distributed Switch (vDS)
A cluster-wide virtual switch that provides consistent networking across hosts and serves as the foundation for NSX overlay traffic.
Geneve
The encapsulation protocol NSX uses to tunnel overlay (logical) network traffic across the physical underlay.
Tier-0 gateway
An NSX gateway that handles north-south routing between the virtual environment and the physical network, typically using BGP or static routes.
Tier-1 gateway
An NSX gateway for tenant/segment-level routing that connects overlay segments and links upward to a Tier-0 gateway.
Distributed Firewall (DFW)
NSX's hypervisor-level firewall that enforces micro-segmentation policy at each VM's virtual NIC, independent of network topology.
vSphere Supervisor
The Kubernetes control plane embedded in vSphere that turns a cluster into a platform for running containers and Kubernetes workloads.
VCF Installer
The tool that performs VCF bring-up — validating inputs and deploying the management domain and initial SDDC components.
VCF Operations
The monitoring and optimization product (formerly Aria Operations) for capacity, performance, health, and alerting across the VCF fleet.
VCF Operations for Logs
Centralized log aggregation and analytics (formerly vRealize/Aria Log Insight) for troubleshooting across the environment.
VCF Operations for Networks
Network flow, path, and topology analytics (formerly vRealize Network Insight) used for visibility and micro-segmentation planning.
VCF Fleet Management
The capability for managing multiple VCF instances/components together, including coordinated lifecycle and oversight at fleet scale.
VCF Health and Diagnostics
Proactive health-check and diagnostic tooling that surfaces issues and remediation guidance across the VCF stack.
VCF Automation
The self-service provisioning and governance product (formerly vRealize/Aria Automation) offering catalogs, tenancy, policies, and extensibility.
Region
A VCF Automation construct grouping infrastructure resources to scope where and how workloads are provisioned.
Multi-org tenancy
VCF Automation's model of separating provider and tenant (org) constructs so multiple organizations share the platform with isolation and governance.
VCF Identity Broker
The platform component that provides identity federation and role-based access control (RBAC) across VCF services.
Lifecycle management (LCM)
VCF's coordinated upgrade and patch process that updates the full SDDC stack in a supported sequence to keep the fleet on compatible versions.

Put it into practice

Studying is step one — practice questions are where it sticks. Start with free VCP-VCF Administrator practice questions, then go Pro for the full ~300-question bank, timed mocks, and an AI tutor.

HOW TO // AI is not affiliated with or endorsed by VMware or Broadcom. VMware Cloud Foundation, VCP-VCF Administrator, and exam 2V0-17.25 are trademarks or certifications of Broadcom Inc.; we reference them descriptively. All content is original.

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Frequently asked questions

How much does the VCP-VCF Administrator (2V0-17.25) exam cost?

Approximately $250 USD (varies by region and taxes), delivered through Pearson VUE at a test center or online proctored.

How many questions is the VCP-VCF Administrator exam?

60 questions — mostly multiple-choice and multiple-response — in a 135-minute appointment that includes onboarding time.

What is the passing score for 2V0-17.25?

300 on Broadcom's scaled scoring method — the scale does not translate directly to a raw percentage, so use consistent practice-exam performance as your readiness signal.

What experience do I need before taking the VCP-VCF Administrator exam?

There is no formal prerequisite, but Broadcom recommends about a year of IT experience plus roughly 6 months working with VMware Cloud Foundation or its components (vSphere, vSAN, NSX).

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