A remote site had a TCF wide power outage today that bricked NetApp B. But we are still able to ping NetApp A from the ESX hosts. However, after removing the bad Nodes IP from the dynamic discovery tab and re-scanning HBA or even rebooting, we still can't connect or see any datastores.
Nothing has changed with NetApp besides the hard cycle bricking it's failover partner. The good node sucessfully took ownership of the volumes and luns. Their online and still mapped to the iGroup yada yada. Additionally, when I put the good nodes target IP back into the dynamic discovery, it doesn't automatically populate the static fields. No we're not using CHAP.
Thanks in advance
Fixed. The issue was Ontap 9.0 had a bug that causes it to fail when in a giveback state for long periods combined with a sudden power outage. Who would have known.
Been in contact with VMware Support?
Take a look into vmkernel log during rescanning.
Regards,
Joerg
No we spent all day with NetApp. How is this a vmware problem? Every host can't connect to storage. It's doubtful that every host is bad.
Ill check the vmkernel log when I get in but anything else I can try in my lab while at home?
If it's not a VMware problem, why post the question on here and not a NetApp forum?
I posted under keywords storage and netapp. Not sure how it works. Plus virtualization usually includes storage at least in all the jobs I've had. If anyone knows storage, I'll be waiting to hear.
So this might be a good place to get help: Home - NetApp Community
Well.. since storage is most of the time part of the game a lot of the guys have knowledge about. But you havent share any usefull information so nobody can jump in.
When you press the add storage button on ESXi, do you see datastores across? If this is the case, the partition table may be corrupt and you may have to create the partition table again.
Can you take lun's snapshot on Netapp and connect it to the esxi host? Maybe there may be a workaround.
Fixed. The issue was Ontap 9.0 had a bug that causes it to fail when in a giveback state for long periods combined with a sudden power outage. Who would have known.