ESX 3.0.2 full featured
server 2003 R2 Guest OS appears shutdown, black console
tried power off, reset, power on not available option, with each attempt I get a message that task failed because another task is in progress. I checked the tasks/events and nothing shows in progress. there is a reset from yesterday that shows successful and after that all show another task in progress.
I need help remembering this, is there a way to emulate a hard boot from the command line or something like that. Seven other vm's running on same host are 100% problem free.
Thanks in advance
Regards,
Paul
If you can run a ps -ef| grep <name of the VM> from the service console you can identidfy the PID that the process is using then use the kill <PID> command to kill the process. This should clear it up.
If for some reason the process does not die try kill 9 <PID>
Hope this helps.
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UPDATE
Just found where the tasks show a suspend from last night that is still showing in-progress but I do not have the option to cancel it.
If you can run a ps -ef| grep <name of the VM> from the service console you can identidfy the PID that the process is using then use the kill <PID> command to kill the process. This should clear it up.
If for some reason the process does not die try kill 9 <PID>
Hope this helps.
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Do you have the option to resume the suspend state?
Try this from the service console:
service mgmt-vmware restart
So the pid that is displayed is the process for that vm, which loosely translates to kill that and it is like pulling the cord out of the wall, right?
and jccoca - won't the mgmt restart affect my other running guests?
No if you don't have any task running.
Thats right. Its just like pulling the plug on a physical server. The worst that can happen is you shut down the VM completely.. Although I have found if you look at the binary in the process name you can identify the task that is occurring. I usually just kill all related processes with the Vm name and deal with the shut down VM afterward.
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that is EXACTLY what I was looking for. I knew you could kill a vm from the command line but has been a year since I had to do it and forgot.
Thanks Bryan,
You Rock Here's some points for ya!