I have uninstalled and reinstalled, I've triple checked that I can log on to the VCenter server using the Update Manager account that is DB Owner on the Update Manager database. I can connect to SQL using the ODBC SQL 2008 native client under that same account. But we get the same error from multiple machines when we install and run the VCenter plugin.
Any Ideas?
If you use Windows Authentication to login to the database you've to change the user with which the Update Manager service start on the virtual center. You've to put the username/password of the user that can connect to the database (by default Update Manager start with Local System account. When installing if the vCenter Server is on Windows 2008 I think you should also use the FQDN of the vCenter server (or the ip address) to be sure it get the right address (something to do with IPv6 on Windows 2008) . At least this worked for me.
What version of vcenter are you running?
david
This is all vcenter 4. This is a new update manager database. The rest of vcenter 4 is fully installed and functional.
john
Thanks,
John
Hi John,
Please check if the name is getting Upgrade Manager system name is getting resolved properly. Normally this issues will pop up when there is problem accessing host which actually even error message is pointing out.
Other option you can try is while installing use IP address instead of hostname.
Let us know if this solves your issue.
Regards,
Ramesh
Which version of SQL 2008 do you have?
Not all version are supported for VUM DB, see page 12 of: https://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsphere4/r40/vsp_compatibility_matrix.pdf
Andre
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Hi John,
Could you please try the following:
1. Check Status of Update Manager Service. If it is not running,
start it and then try enabling the plug-in.
2. If the proxy is enabled without the option
to bypass the local addresses, enable that setting in IE, restart VIClient and
try enabling Update Manager.
3. Try restarting the Update Manager and DB services.
Also, if you could send us the logs, it would be really helpful.
Thanks,
Roli
If you use Windows Authentication to login to the database you've to change the user with which the Update Manager service start on the virtual center. You've to put the username/password of the user that can connect to the database (by default Update Manager start with Local System account. When installing if the vCenter Server is on Windows 2008 I think you should also use the FQDN of the vCenter server (or the ip address) to be sure it get the right address (something to do with IPv6 on Windows 2008) . At least this worked for me.
We are actually using SQL 2008 Standard 64 bit - which oddly enough is not supported? Can't quite understand why since that version is supported for vcenter. And SQL 2005 standard was supported for update mananger.
It does seem to work with SQL 2008 Std 64bit though. Once we changed the service to use the domain account (See post below). That's not noted anywhere I could find.
fduranti,
Thanks, that was it (Changing the Service Account)! And the fix is something I should have tried I didn;t see any mention of it in the install guide though and I didn't make note of how the previous version was set. Since vcenter itself changes the service, you think update mananger would as well. Go figure. Thanks again!
BTW, Update Manager on SQL 2008 Standard 64bit seems to work just fine, even though it appears it is not supported.
This fixed my problem. New to using Windows Authentication with VMware... I used the same DB User account to install VUM as I did VC...
But the installer didn't set the Service Account Settings. Resetting the Service Account Settings fixed the problem...
Regards
Mike Laverick
RTFM Education
Author of the SRM Book: http://www.lulu.com/content/4343147
Switching the logon account for the Update Manager service from Local System to the AD account we're using for the VUM DSN did NOT address the issue we are having here. The service will not start....we get an error that the service Terminated Unexepectedly. This is the same AD account that the VCenter service is set to log on with.
We worked with vmware support for several hours and got nowhere. Their next suggestion is to try switching to SQL Auth for the DSN for Update Manager and reinstall Update Manager We're going to try that now, but it's not the ideal solution.
-Ron
Update...
We uninstalled Update Manager, reconfigured the DSN to use SQL Auth, reinstalled Update Manager, reinstalled the PlugIn and everything is working fine now. This was not an ideal solution, but we're living with it for now for the sake of progress.
-Ron
I am having the same problem (I think).
I am upgrading to vSphere 4.
We are using a remote DB for vCenter and Update Manager that is SQL Server 2005.
I have upgraded the vCenter to 4.0 and installed the new 4.0 client.
I also installed Converter Enterprise 4.0 and enabled the plugin.
I created a new DSN connection to our SQL Server 2005 DB using SQL Native Client driver that
matched the old Upd Mgr connection that used the SQL Server driver. The test connect works to the SQL Server 2005 DB connecting with Windows NT authentication using the network login ID.
I installed Update Manager 4.0 from the CD and the service is running.
When I go to install Update Manager the plug-in in vCenter, I get an error –
There was an error connection to VMware vCenter Update Manager Database temporarily unavailable or network problems.
This is the same SQL Server database that vCetner is using and the DSNs are configured the same.
It appears during the plug-in installation, Update Manager is trying to connect to the SQL Server DB but fails..
I have tried uninstalling Update Manager and client and reinstalling.
When I reconfigured the DSN to use SQL Authentication, I entered the SQL Server DB User and the password.
The test connect works. I saved it. But, if I go back and do a reconfigure, the password field is blank, so I am not sure what is going on.
Any ides what may be happening or a suggestion to try?
thanks
Stan
I have been on client site and ran into this similar issue. Like most, I attempted all things stated here without resolution. The fix was shortly determined to be ensuring the service account's (AD User) default database was set to the Update Manager database within SQL. I did NOT need to change the Update Manager service to run under the service account's ID. Setting the service account to run under the service account only made the service fail to start.
It should probably be noted that after I made the SQL changes I did remove and reinstall Update Manager along with resetup the DSN. During the reinstall of Update Manager, I utilized the service account ID/PW during the entire install process.
Good luck and hope this helps everyone going forward!
Same issue as Ron. I either get the service started with the builtin SYSTEM user and a database login failure message using NT/anonymous or I change the service to start with the db owner account (which is how it was working with 2.5 u4) and the service won't start. SQL Auth is not an option for our shop. The logs i believe are just showing a crash and dump when the service fails to start correctly.
I noticed that the SQL server was rejecting logins from the DOMAIN\UM_SERVER$ account -- the AD machine account for my update manager server. While beating my head against a wall, I decided to create a SQL login for that machine account on the UM database and granted it DBO.
Everything seemed to work after that: I'm using Windows Authentication, the UM service is running as LOCALSYSTEM on the UM server, and the SQL server is on a remote box. The plugin will now load in vCenter and it isn't complaining.
Hope that helps -- bear in mind that I'm in no way a SQL person and would love to know if I just created some kind of nasty security hole
Edit: It was very helpful to me to look at the vmware-vum-server-log4cpp.log file located here
C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\VMware\VMware Update Manager\Logs
on my UM server.
Wow... that was the fix for me too! Thanks!
Still not sure why I can't use the same user to run the Update Manager as I do to run the main database, but at this point I'm not complaining. Incidentally, this is against a SQL 2008 Enterprise server, running on Server 2008 Enterprise 64-bit. Virtual Center is on a dedicated hardware box, SQL is its own set of boxes, ESX servers are their own set of boxes.
I think I have the same problem, please explain what you did, what about the DSN's?
After playing with the DSN's and SQL permissions I fixed my VUM so it loads now but I when I click remediate I get an the error that the database is unavailable. I can do scans okay? I am running Server 2003 64bit with SQL2008 Standard 64bit with Vcenter 4.0 build 208111.
You may also want to check the UM log files. I have found that the errors in the logs can sometimes help isolate the errors.
Yes, it also happens after I migrated the VC DB into to the new server.
I've got:
There was an error connecting to VMware vCenter Update Manager 8084 Database temporarily unavailable
XXX com.vmware.vcIntegrity.SigUpdateTask.label not found XXX
vCenter01.domain.com
Queued
VMware vCenter Update Manager Update Download
this is on Windows Server 2003 Std. x64 with SQL Server 2008 Std x64 running vCenter 4.0 u1
can anyone clarify how to fix this please ?