Hi all,
today I saw a warning in my vCenter:
"vSphere UI Health Alarm"
When I look into the vCenter Appliance Management I can see that there is a warning at the VMware vSphere Client service. It says: "The server is running low on heap memory (>90% utilized.)"
We ware running the vCenter Server Appliance 6.7.0.21000 build 11726888
Can anybody help to solve this?
Thanks a lot.
Add ore memory to vCenter machine. Also always, choose right size for vCenter server during installation.
vCenter Machine has already 16GB memory and only 3GB are used. Should I still add more memory?
Right size was chosen during installation.
Just wondering if you have ever found a solution for this. We get this about four times a day, where
vsphere-ui status changed from green to yellow
and then back to green about 30 minutes later.
Any suggestions of where to look? Thanks,
Increase the heap size for vsphere-client and vsphere-ui by 1 GB .
VMware Knowledge Base Also works for vcsa 6.7
services names are vsphere-client and vsphere-ui in 6.5 and 6.7
For VCSA 6.5/6.7 :-
service-control stop vsphere-client
service-control stop vsphere-ui
service-control start vsphere-client
service-control start vsphere-ui
Regards,
AJ
eddilimp did you get this resolved?
We have 3 hosts and about 30 VMs, so we chose "tiny". Yet I've seen similar warnings about the ui and client memory usage pop up once or twice.
I've also seen VAMI itself report a warning about memory usage (even though the host claims the VCSA is using about 2.5 GB or 10 GB, VAMI thinks it's about 80% of 10 GB).
I'd rather not mess with these settings if it's unnecessary to do so.
You can find this alarm definition in Vcenter>Configure>Alarmdefinition
In the alarm configuration, you should turn off email notifications on alarm rule 1 which triggers the notification when the status changes from yellow to green if you consider it´s not critical to receive this mail. If you check the other rules, there is a rule that triggers a notificatión when the status changes from red to green that from my point of view is a critical one.
If you're looking to fix this problem so that you don't turn off any notifications, you have to increase RAM memory on your Vsphere host, in my case Vsphere is located on a virtual machine, so what I do is turn off correctly my Vsphere from the CLI, then add more RAM, the allocated RAM depends on the number of virtual machines running on your host. Check this article https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/7.0/com.vmware.vcenter.install.doc/GUID-88571D8A-46E1-464D...
Hope it helps.
Hi,
IMHO,
In my experience, over time the amount of RAM required for a good functioning (without reporting errors) of the vCenter object is actually changed from version to version.
So, the so-called "tiny" deployment model is just the bare minimum nowadays, if we want to say it in another way, each one should set the number of vCPUs and the amount of RAM memory according to the peculiarities of their environment.
Regards,
Ferdinando