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13 Replies Last post: Jul 9, 2009 9:44 PM by megha012  

Losing remote connectivity on assigning virtual harddisks posted: Jun 23, 2009 3:27 AM

Click to view megha012's profile Novice 7 posts since
Jun 23, 2009

I have setup a windows 2003 guest OS on an ESX 3.5 server.

After the machine is up and running, I assigned a virtual harddisk with a virtual scsi adaptor set to "Virtual" for the harddisks.

Once i bring up the machine after this, the remote connectivity for the machine is lost.

Is this the expected behavior or have i missed something ?

Any help would be great.


Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007

I would start to troubleshoot this by looking at the log files in the folder with the VM. If you post some of the log file, I can help figure out what is wrong.

You can get the log file by SSH into the host, or by browsing the datastore through the VIC.

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Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007

Unfortunately, I don't see anything either. It looks like the VMTools have not been installed yet? Kind of hard to install them now though. That should not be the cause of what you are seeing.

Does removing the disk that you added, let you manage it again? Is this ESX 3.5 U4?

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Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007
That is update 2. Not sure if updating to U4 would fix it, but I would try it. Also, are there any snapshots on the VM?

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Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007
What do you mean when you say you can share virtual disks? Are you assigning one virtual disk to multiple VM's?

Charles Killmer, VCP

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Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007

In what cases does the VM fail?

Single disk

Multiple disks without sharing

Multiple disks with sharing

Is the other VM set ti virtual adapter?

If it is only when it is sharing the disk, we will look more closely at how that works.

Charles Killmer, VCP

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Click to view Chuck8773's profile Expert 229 posts since
May 4, 2007

I just tried it in our environment with a Win 2003 guest and it works fine. ESX 3.5 U4.

Did you create the vmdk file thik? I followed this post to get it working.

http://communities.vmware.com/thread/74088

Charles Killmer, VCP

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Click to view wila's profile Virtuoso 3,269 posts since
Jun 27, 2006
Hi,
But once I do this on VM1 and bring it up, the connectivity is lost. At this point I havent even assigned that disk to VM2.
You never said that the VM still boots, it's not that the new disk is now the disk the VM tries to boot from by any chance?

PS: VMs are not supposed to share disks unless you install an OS on there which can work with clustered filesystems and a quorum disk.


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Wil
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VI-Toolkit & scripts wiki at http://www.vi-toolkit.com

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