Remove Gigamon Service from NSX-T and GigaVUE‑FM

To clean up the Gigamon Deep Observability Pipeline from VMware NSX-T and GigaVUE‑FM, perform the following steps in order:

Step 1: Remove the Rule and Policy

To delete the network monitoring services:

  1. Select Security > Service Chain Management > E-W Network Introspection. The E-W Network Introspection page appears.
  2. On the E-W Network Introspection page, locate the policy created for Gigamon tapping.
  3. Expand the policy and perform the following:
    1. To delete the rule associated with the policy, select the icon on the Rule Column and then select Delete
    2. To delete the policy, select the icon on the policy and then select Delete.

Step 2: Remove the Service Chain

To delete the network monitoring services:

  1. In NSX-T Manager, select Security > Settings > Network Introspection.
  2. Select the SERVICE CHAINS tab.
  3. Located the service chain associated with the Gigamon service profile,
  4. Select available next to the service chain and select Delete.

Step 3: Delete the Monitoring Session

To delete the Monitoring session from GigaVUE‑FM:

  1. From the left pane, select Traffic > VIRTUAL > Orchestrated Flows > VMware.
    The Monitoring Sessions pertaining to all VMware deployment appears.
  2. Select the NSX-T related Monitoring Session and select Actions > Undeploy.
    The Monitoring Session is Undeployed.
  3. Select the Monitoring Session again and select Actions > Delete.

This action deletes the corresponding service profile and the profile from the NSX-T manager console.

Step 4: Delete the Monitoring Domain

To delete the Monitoring Domain and the GigaVUE V Series Node deployed in GigaVUE‑FM:

  1. From the left navigation pane, select Inventory > VIRTUAL > VMware NSX-T > Monitoring Domain.
    The Monitoring Domain page appears with the deployed GigaVUE V Series Nodes.
  2. Select the appropriate Monitoring Domain,
  3. Select Actions > Delete Monitoring Domain.

This action deletes the corresponding Service Deployment from the NSX-T Manager.