I recently ran in to a situation where one of the events in vCenter wasn’t showing up in Operations Manager
Doing some research and i found this kb article: 65106
Basically theres a file called eventlist.txt under /usr/lib/vmware-vcops/user/plugins/inbound/vmwarevi_adapter3/conf/ on the master node so i logged on to master node via ssh and did
vi /usr/lib/vmware-vcops/user/plugins/inbound/vmwarevi_adapter3/conf/eventlist.txt
Comment out the event that we want to get alerts for and restart the service by running
I recently purchased one of the newer Mac mini devices with the new M1 chipset. Unfortunately I went with the lower edition that had 256 GB and I wanted to send it back to purchase the bigger 512 GB edition, but I wanted to clean my installation.
In order to to boot in the recovery mode to reinstall the os I had to perform the following steps:
Make sure the Mac mini is off, if its not off just shut it off
Hold the power button until the options appear, it might seem like a long time but keep holding it. It took about 15 seconds for me.
A menu should appear that shows the hard drive and Options. Select options and continue
You will see the apple logo and then a new menu should appear with additional options. It would look like this:
5. If you want to perform a clean install go to Disk Utility first and erase the current partitions, after that step is complete come back to the options screen and Select Reinstall macOS Big Sur and click on continue
With the latest release of ESXi7U1 i wanted to get my lab up to date. I dont have enough resources in my lab to migrate the vCenter to another ESXi server so i want to perform the upgrade via cli. More details about the release can found here
The first step was to open the firewall for outgoing traffic for http
esxcli network firewall ruleset set -e true -r httpClient
This returned a list of updates that were available:
I reviewed the downloads website here to double check the version. Based on the information i found the ESXi-7.0.1-16850804-standard is the latest release
While i was trying to perform an upgrade to my ESXi installation i ran in to the below error:
The fix was pretty simple. The hypervisor doesnt have enough space to download and install the package so we need to enable one of the available datastores for the function.
For vCenter go to the host in question to Configure -> System -> System Swap
While reviewing the configuration i noticed that i had 2 options enabled
Clicking on the edit button on the right corner i noticed that i can add one of the datastores
After i Clicked ok i was able to continue with my upgrade
With the release of of VCF 4.1 i wanted to get my lab upgraded. The release blog can be found here and the release notes are here
In my case i pre downloaded the VMware Cloud Foundation Update 4.1.0.0 by going to Repository -> Bundle management -> Download now
The next step is to upgrade VCF by going to Inventory -> Workload Domains -> Select the workload domain -> Update/Patches -> Update Now
Next we are taken to the Upgrade page where we can follow the upgrade for each one of the components
Once the upgrade is complete we can click Finish to be returned back to the main screen
Because we are changing the SDDC-Manager version i would strongly recommend to clear cache and log back in before going forward.
The next update is the configuration drift bundle. We can go to nventory -> Workload Domains -> Select the workload domain -> Update/Patches -> Download now
Once the download is complete click on update now
Once the upgrade started i got redirected tot he Update status page. Considering the update is only 204 MB the upgrade went through pretty quickly. Once its completed we can click finish to get back to the main sddc manager page
Next step is to upgrade NSX-T installation to NSX-T 3.0.2. Click on Download now from the same page as above
Once the download is complete click on Update Now
We can view the status and the steps by clicking on View Status. Once the upgrade is complete we are redirected back to the available upates page showing that the vCenter server is next
Click on Download now and wait for the download to complete. Once the download is complete click on update now
We can view the task by clicking on View Status
Once the upgrade is complete we are taken back to the previous page where we can see that the ESXi servers are next. Click on Download Now
Once the download is complete we can click on Update now
If we have multiple clusters we can enable Cluster-level selection and select the specific luster(s) we want to upgrade.
We can also enable sequential cluster upgrade as well as quick boot
We get to review the options once again before we click finish to to submit the task
Once submitted we can view the status by clicking on View Status
And with that we are finished with the workload domain. We can get back to the Update/Patches page to see that there are no more updates available
Next is the Workload domains where we can follow the same instructions as above. The process will be allot quicker because the upgrades are already downloaded
After upgrading my vCenter Server to the latest vSphere 7.0 Update 1, I was unable to see ESXi 7.0 Update 1 Image. When I attempted to sync the updates I got the error “Download patch definitions task failed while syncing depots. Error: ‘integrity.fault.HostPatchInvalidVendorCode’.”
Seeing as the error mentioned the depots, navigate to Menu->Lifecycle Manager and then select the Settings tab and then Patch Setup.
Select the radio button for Partner provided Addons for ESXi and click Disable. Proceed to click on Action and then Sync Updates. The sync should now complete successfully.
With the release of vCenter 7 Update 1, VMware introuced the vCLS (vSphere Clustering Service). More information can be found here.
Looking at the error details it looks like it is looking for a feature called cpuid.mwait
Reviewing the VMX file it seems like EVC is enabled on the vCLS VMs. I didnt want to enable EVC on the whole cluster so i wanted to do it only on the specific VMs.
Doing some research i found that the VMs need to be at version 14. After upgrading the VM i was able to disable EVC on the specific VMs by following these steps:
In the vSphere Client, navigate to the virtual machine
Under the Actions -> Compatibility -> Upgrade VM compatibility
We can disable EVC on per VM level on version 14 and above, so in my case i chose ESXi 6.7 and later
Next go to the Configure Tab
Pick VMware EVC and click on Edit
Click on Yes
Click on Disable EVC and Click OK
The next time it tries to power on the VM it should go through.
Once the first VM starts up it will most likely deploy a few additional ones, follow the same steps as above again on the new VMs