Hi
We have esx 3i 3.5 u3 server. Suddenly uresponsive from virtual center, but server is up and running . vm's also fine. how to solve the issue
Regards
Surya
Did you try to restart the management agents at the console DCUI (i.e. Press F2, login and then select to restart the management agents)?
hi
I have restart the the agents still iam facing same problem.
Thanks
Surya
Are you able to connect directly to the host with the VI client?
Hi
I am not able to connect to esx server through VI client and Rcli .
I was in the same boat yesterday with 4 of our ESXi U2 boxes. They all were disconnected, couldn't manage them directly via the VI client. I restarted network and management agents multiple times with no luck. Ultimately I had to power down and re-register all of the VMs on that cluster and reboot the hosts manually. What type of hardware are you using? Definitely interested in figuring out what causes this problem.
What sort of hardware are you running?
Hi
my hardware is Bl20p g3 and BL 460C g1 servers. finally we shut down the all the VM's and we rebooted the esx server. now its working fine.
Regards
Surya
IBM HS21 XM blades, onboard solid state drives for the ESXi installation, fiber attached storage via a Qlogic HBA, 32GB RAM and dual quad core 5450s.
I've also got this problem on one of our ESXi servers - ESXi 3.5 U3 Build 130755.
Tried restarting the agent from the console but no luck. I fear the only option is going to be to restart the server. We used to have this problem a lot with ESX but i had hoped ESXi would be more reliable.
As weird as it sounds...
Had a similar problem. Found it was a Windows 2003 server running as a VM that was locking ESXi up on a regular basis meaning a hard-boot of the ESXi box.
As soon as I had shut down that vm, and left it off, ESXi was fine again.
Ended up reinstalling and reconfiguring the W2K3 server.
Don't know how this happened as the HAL should prevent this. Maybe mine was just an oddity.
I'm pretty sure I've identified what's causing this. If you have a read
of this site
http://blog.scottlowe.org/2008/12/23/random-reboots-with-vmware-esx-35-u
pdate-3/ you'll see a post from Mike Karolow. Basically it's a problem
with HA logging on the ESXi server. I've tried running the command he
suggests and it returns 0 free inodes (my logs also show 'not enough
space on the device' error messages when trying to restart the
management agents).
Interestingly VMware have just released vCenter 2.5 U4. One fix in this
is:
"ESX Server 3i Installations Run Out of Inodes and Stop Responding to
the VirtualCenter Server
In previous releases, when an ESX Server 3i host in an HA-enabled
cluster is isolated from the VirtualCenter network and reconnected back
to the VirtualCenter network, after a while no free inodes might be
available for the ESX Server 3i and the ESX Server 3i host might stop
responding to the VirtualCenter Server and the VI Client.
This issue is resolved"
I've just got to decide whether to disable HA for the moment or install
a less than one day old upgrade to vCenter.
Hope this helps.
James
What work for me was turning off HA.
Confugring the cluster options with the das.failuredetectiontime = 60000
Then re-enabling HA on the cluster.
I just ran into this issue for the 3rd time.
I found there are a lot of aam log files in /var/log/vmware/aam/rule
use the following command to clear them all out (rm *.log doesn't work)
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9; do rm /var/log/vmware/aam/rule/$i*.log ; done; services.sh restart
This has worked for me many times now.