Vsphere HTML Host Client 125 Guide
Vsphere HTML Host Client 125 Guide
Vsphere HTML Host Client 125 Guide
Management - VMware
Host Client
Modified on 27 APR 2018
VMware vSphere 6.7
VMware ESXi 6.7
VMware Host Client 1.25.0
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
You can find the most up-to-date technical documentation on the VMware website at:
https://docs.vmware.com/
If you have comments about this documentation, submit your feedback to
docfeedback@vmware.com
VMware, Inc.
3401 Hillview Ave.
Palo Alto, CA 94304
www.vmware.com
Copyright © 2015–2018 VMware, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright and trademark information.
VMware, Inc. 2
Contents
Updated Information 6
VMware, Inc. 3
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
VMware, Inc. 4
About vSphere Single Host Management -
VMware Host Client
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client provides information about managing single
hosts with the VMware Host Client.
The VMware Host Client can be utilized to conduct emergency management when vCenter Server is
unavailable. You can use the VMware Host Client to perform administrative tasks and basic
troubleshooting tasks, as well as advanced administrative tasks.
Intended Audience
This information is intended for anyone who wants to use the VMware Host Client to manage single ESXi
hosts. The information is written for experienced Windows or Linux system administrators who are familiar
with virtual machine technology and datacenter operations.
VMware, Inc. 5
Updated Information
This vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client is updated with each release of the product
or when necessary.
This table provides the update history of the vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client.
Revision Description
27 APR 2018 Updated the note about taking snapshots in Take a Snapshot in the VMware Host Client.
VMware, Inc. 6
VMware Host Client Overview 1
The VMware Host Client is an HTML5-based client that is used to connect to and manage single ESXi
hosts.
You can use the VMware Host Client to perform administrative and basic troubleshooting tasks, as well as
advanced administrative tasks on your target ESXi host. You can also use the VMware Host Client to
conduct emergency management when vCenter Server is not available.
It is important to know that the VMware Host Client is different from the vSphere Web Client, regardless of
their similar user interfaces. You use the vSphere Web Client to connect to vCenter Server and manage
multiple ESXi hosts, whereas you use the VMware Host Client to manage a single ESXi host.
VMware Host Client functions include, but are not limited to the following operations:
n Basic virtualization operations, such as deploying and configuring virtual machines of various
complexity
The following guest operating systems and Web browser versions are supported for the
VMware Host Client.
VMware, Inc. 7
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Note The VMware Host Client only works for administrative users.
Procedure
1 In a Web browser enter the target host name or IP address using the form http://host-name/ui or
http://host-IP-address/ui.
4 Review the VMware Customer Experience Improvement Program (CEIP) page and choose whether
you want to join the program.
To learn about the program and how to configure it at any time, see Configuring Customer Experience
Improvement Program.
5 Click OK.
Note Closing a VMware Host Client session does not stop the host.
Procedure
u To log out of the ESXi host, click the user name at the top of the VMware Host Client window and
select Log out from the drop-down menu.
You are now logged out of the VMware Host Client. Your target ESXi host continues to run all its
normal activities.
VMware, Inc. 8
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Details regarding the data collected through CEIP and the purposes for which it is used by VMware are
set forth at the Trust & Assurance Center at http://www.vmware.com/trustvmware/ceip.html. To join or
leave the CEIP for this product, see Leave and Rejoin the Customer Experience Improvement Program in
the VMware Host Client.
Procedure
1 To leave and rejoin the CEIP, click the user name at the top of the VMware Host Client page.
2 Point to Client settings> Send usage statistics, to leave or rejoin the CEIP.
VMware, Inc. 9
Host Management with the
VMware Host Client 2
With the VMware Host Client, you can manage single ESXi hosts during vCenter Server upgrades or
when vCenter Server stops responding or becomes unavailable.
The VMware Host Client has a crucial set of troubleshooting functions, which allow you to perform tasks
on the ESXi host that you are logged in to if vCenter Server is unavailable. These functions include but
are not limited to configuring advanced host settings, licensing, managing certificates, using the
ESXi Shell, enabling Lockdown mode, and so on.
n Lockdown Mode
Caution Changing advanced options is considered unsupported unless VMware technical support or a
KB article instruct you to do so. In all other cases, changing these options is considered unsupported. In
most cases, the default settings produce the optimum result.
VMware, Inc. 10
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click System.
3 Right-click the appropriate item from the list and select Edit option from the drop-down menu.
5 (Optional) Right-click the appropriate item from the list and select Reset to default to go back to the
original settings of the item.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click System.
4 Select an option for setting the time and date of the host.
Option Description
Manually configure the date and time Set the time and date for the host manually.
on this host
Use Network Time Protocol (Enable Synchronize the time and date of the host with an NTP server. The NTP service
NTP client) on the host periodically takes the time and date from the NTP server.
a In the NTP Servers text box, enter the IP addresses or host names of the
NTP servers that you want to use.
b From the NTP Service Startup Policy drop-down menu, select an option for
starting and stopping the NTP service on the host.
n Start and stop with port usage. Starts or stops the NTP service when
the NTP client port is enabled or disabled for access in the security profile
of the host.
n Start and stop with host. Starts and stops the NTP service when the
host powers on and shuts down.
n Start and stop manually. Enables manual starting and stopping of the
NTP service.
You can use the Start, Stop, or Restart buttons to control the status of the NTP
service on the host at any time regardless of the selected startup policy for the
NTP service. If you select the Start and stop manually policy, the status of the
NTP service only changes when you use the UI controls.
VMware, Inc. 11
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Selecting a high-performance policy provides more absolute performance, but at lower efficiency and
performance per watt. Low-power policies provide less absolute performance, but at higher efficiency.
You can select a policy for the host that you manage by using the VMware Host Client. If you do not
select a policy, ESXi uses Balanced by default.
When a CPU runs at lower frequency, it can also run at lower voltage, which saves power. This type of
power management is typically called Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS). ESXi attempts to
adjust CPU frequencies so that virtual machine performance is not affected.
When a CPU is idle, ESXi can apply deep halt states, also known as C-states. The deeper the C-state,
the less power the CPU uses, but it also takes longer for the CPU to start running again. When a CPU
becomes idle, ESXi applies an algorithm to predict the idle state duration and chooses an appropriate C-
state to enter. In power management policies that do not use deep C-states, ESXi uses only the
shallowest halt state for idle CPUs, C1.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Hardware.
VMware, Inc. 12
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 Select the radio button next to the policy that you want to apply.
4 Click OK.
To license an ESXi host, you must assign it a vSphere license that meets the following prerequisites:
n The license must have sufficient CPU capacity to license all physical CPUs on the host. For example,
to license two ESXi hosts that have four CPUs each, you need a vSphere license with a minimum
capacity of 8 CPUs to the hosts.
n The license must support all the features that the host uses. For example, if the host is associated
with a vSphere Distributed Switch, the license that you assign must support the vSphere Distributed
Switch feature.
If you attempt to assign a license that has insufficient capacity or does not support the features that the
host uses, the license assignment fails.
You can assign and reassign the CPU capacity of a vSphere license to any combination of ESXi hosts.
You can assign a vSphere license for 10 CPUs to any of the following combinations of hosts:
Dual-core and quad-core CPUs, such as Intel CPUs that combine two or four independent CPUs on a
single chip, count as one CPU.
Evaluation Mode
When you install ESXi, its default license is evaluation mode. Evaluation mode licenses expire after 60
days. An evaluation mode license provides the set of features that equals the highest vSphere product
edition.
If you assign a license to an ESXi host before its evaluation period expires, the time available in the
evaluation period decreases by the time already used. To explore the entire set of features available for
the host, set it back to evaluation mode, and use it for the remaining evaluation period.
For example, if you use an ESXi host in evaluation mode for 20 days, then assign a vSphere Standard
license to the host, and then set the host back to evaluation mode, you can explore the entire set of
features available for the host for the remaining evaluation period of 40 days.
VMware, Inc. 13
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
If you upgrade an ESXi host to a version that starts with a different number, you must apply a new
license. For example, if you upgrade an ESXi host from 5.x to 6.x, you need to license the host with a
vSphere 6 license.
vSphere Desktop
vSphere Desktop is intended for VDI environments such as Horizon View. The license usage for vSphere
Desktop equals the total number of powered on desktop virtual machines running on the hosts that are
assigned a vSphere Desktop license.
Procedure
u Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Licensing.
You can view the license key, the expiration date, and all the available features and assets.
Prerequisites
Note If you use vCenter Server to manage your ESXi host, you can only change your licenses from the
vSphere Web Client.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Licensing.
2 Click Assign license, enter a license key in the form XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX, and click
Check license.
VMware, Inc. 14
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
For example, suppose that you have upgraded a vSphere license from 5.0 to 5.5 in My VMware. You
assign the license to ESXi 5.5 hosts. After assigning the new vSphere 5.5 licenses, you must remove the
old vSphere 5.0 license from the inventory.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Licensing.
If you provide a VIB, an existing VIB that is installed to your VMware Host Client environment is updated
to the new VIB.
If a link to a metadata.zip file is provided, the entire ESXi system is updated to the version described by
the metadata.zip file.
Caution If the host is managed by vSphere Update Manager, updating the host via this message might
cause Update Manager to report the host as non-compliant.
Procedure
2 Click Install update and enter the URL of the VIB or a metadata.zip file.
3 Click Update.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Services.
VMware, Inc. 15
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Restart
n Start
n Stop
4 (Optional) From the Actions drop-down menu, select Policy and select an option for the service from
the menu.
Join an ESXi Host to a Directory Service Domain by Using the VMware Host Client
To use a directory service for your host, you must join the host to the directory service domain.
n name.tld (for example, domain.com): The account is created under the default container.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Security & Users.
4 Enter the user name and password of a directory service user account that has permissions to join
the host to the domain and click Join domain.
VMware, Inc. 16
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
5 (Optional) If you intend to use an authentication proxy, enter the proxy server IP address and click
Join domain.
Creating local user accounts on each host presents challenges with having to synchronize account
names and passwords across multiple hosts. Join ESXi hosts to an Active Directory domain to eliminate
the need to create and maintain local user accounts. Using Active Directory for user authentication
simplifies the ESXi host configuration and reduces the risk for configuration issues that could lead to
unauthorized access.
When you use Active Directory, users supply their Active Directory credentials and the domain name of
the Active Directory server when adding a host to a domain.
vSphere Authentication Proxy is especially useful when used with Auto Deploy. You can set up a
reference host that points to Authentication Proxy and set up a rule that applies the reference host's
profile to any ESXi host provisioned with Auto Deploy. Even if you use vSphere Authentication Proxy in an
environment that uses certificates that are provisioned by VMCA or third-party certificates, the process
works seamlessly as long as you follow the instructions for using custom certificates with Auto Deploy.
See the vSphere Security guide.
Note You cannot use vSphere Authentication Proxy in an environment that supports only IPv6.
Import a New Certificate for an ESXi Host in the VMware Host Client
You can import a certificate from a trusted certificate authority when you are logged in to an ESXi host
with the VMware Host Client.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Security & Users.
VMware, Inc. 17
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 Generate a certificate signing request, which is either an FQDN signing request or an IP signing
request.
The certificate signing request is then passed to the certificate authority to generate the official
certificate.
An FQDN request has the fully qualified hostname of the host in the resulting common name field of
the certificate. The IP signing request has the current IP address of the host in the common name
field.
4 Paste a PEM formatted certificate in the certificate text box and click Import.
You do not have to import the certificate immediately but you cannot reboot the host between
generating the certificate signing request and importing the certificate.
For information about configuration management of ESXi hosts, see the vSphere Networking
documentation, the vSphere Storage documentation, and the vSphere Security documentation.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Manage with vCenter Server from
the drop-down menu.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Disconnect from vCenter Server
from the pop-up menu.
Note Disconnecting a host signals vCenter Server that this host is not responding.
VMware, Inc. 18
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
n Host.Configuration.Maintenance
n Global.Log event
Always perform the following tasks before you reboot or shut down a host:
Procedure
Note If the host is not in maintenance mode, shutting down or rebooting it does not stop the virtual
machines that are running on this host safely and unsaved data may be lost. If the host is part of a
vSAN cluster, you might lose access to the vSAN data on the host.
To reduce the risk of unauthorized access, enable the ESXi Shell for troubleshooting only.
The ESXi Shell is independent of in lockdown mode. Even if the host is running in lockdown mode, you
can still log in to the ESXi Shell if it is enabled.
ESXi Shell Enable this service to access the ESXi Shell locally.
SSH Enable this service to access the ESXi Shell remotely by using SSH.
The root user and users with the Administrator role can access the ESXi Shell. Users who are in the
Active Directory group ESX Admins are automatically assigned the Administrator role. By default, only the
root user can run system commands (such as vmware -v) by using the ESXi Shell.
Note Do not enable the ESXi Shell unless you actually need access.
VMware, Inc. 19
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 To enable or disable the Secure Shell (SSH), right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory.
2 Select Services from the drop-down menu and select Secure Shell (SSH).
Procedure
1 To enable or disable the Console Shell, right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory.
2 Select Services from the drop-down menu and select Console Shell.
The host is in a state of Entering Maintenance Mode until all running virtual machines are powered off or
migrated to different hosts. You cannot power off virtual machines or migrate virtual machines to a host
that is entering or in maintenance mode.
To place a host in maintenance mode, all virtual machines that are running on the host must be powered
off or migrated to different hosts. If you attempt to place a host that has running virtual machines on it in
maintenance mode, DRS must power off or migrate the running virtual machines for the task to complete.
If a time out occurs before the virtual machines are powered off or migrated, an error message appears.
When all virtual machines on the host are inactive, the host's icon displays under maintenance and the
host's Summary panel indicates the new state. While in maintenance mode, the host does not allow you
to deploy or power on a virtual machine.
VMware, Inc. 20
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Before you place a host in maintenance mode, power off all virtual machines that are running on that host
or migrate them to another host either manually or automatically by DRS.
Procedure
The host is in maintenance mode until you select Exit maintenance mode.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Generate support bundle from the
drop-down menu.
A dialog box that contains a link to download the bundle pops up when the support bundle is created.
2 (Optional) Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Tasks, and click a log bundle from
the list.
You can view the link to the log bundle under the table.
To reduce memory consumption, the VMware Host Client only contains statistics for the last hour.
Procedure
2 (Optional) To view the host usage for the last hour, select an option from the drop-down menu.
n To view the percentage of CPU that the host used during the last hour, select CPU.
n To view the percentage of memory that the host consumed during the last hour, select Memory.
u To view the percentage of network that the host consumed during the last hour, select Network.
u To view the disk usage that the host consumed during the last hour, select Disk.
VMware, Inc. 21
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Note Hardware health status is only available when the underlying hardware supports it.
Procedure
1 Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Hardware.
3 (Optional) Use the filter controls above the list to filter the list.
Prerequisites
Procedure
u Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Events.
b (Optional) Use the filter controls above the list to filter the list.
Procedure
u Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Tasks.
b (Optional) Use the filter controls above the list to filter the list.
VMware, Inc. 22
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Logs.
Procedure
1 Click Monitor in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Notifications.
A message with a recommended action and a description is displayed under the notifications list.
Lockdown Mode
To increase the security of your ESXi hosts, you can put them in lockdown mode. In lockdown mode,
operations must be performed through vCenter Server by default.
Normal Lockdown In normal lockdown mode, the DCUI service remains active. If the
Mode connection to the vCenter Server system is lost, and access through the
vSphere Web Client is unavailable, privileged accounts can log in to the
ESXi host's Direct Console Interface and exit lockdown mode. Only the
following accounts can access the Direct Console User Interface:
n Accounts in the Exception User list for lockdown mode who have
administrative privileges on the host. The Exception Users list is meant
for service accounts that perform specific tasks. Adding ESXi
administrators to this list defeats the purpose of lockdown mode.
VMware, Inc. 23
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Users defined in the DCUI.Access advanced option for the host. This
option is for emergency access to the Direct Console Interface in case
the connection to vCenter Server is lost. These users do not require
administrative privileges on the host.
Strict Lockdown Mode In strict lockdown mode, the DCUI service is stopped. If the connection to
vCenter Server is lost and the vSphere Web Client is no longer available,
the ESXi host becomes unavailable, unless the ESXi Shell and SSH
services are enabled and Exception Users are defined. If you cannot
restore the connection to the vCenter Server system, you must reinstall the
host.
When a host is in lockdown mode, users on the Exception Users list can access the host from the
ESXi Shell and through SSH if they have the Administrator role on the host. This access is possible even
in strict lockdown mode. Leaving the ESXi Shell service and the SSH service disabled is the most secure
option.
Note The Exception Users list is meant for service accounts that perform specific tasks such as host
backups, and not for administrators. Adding administrator users to the Exception Users list defeats the
purpose of lockdown mode.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory, select Lockdown mode from the drop-down
menu, and select Enter normal lockdown.
VMware, Inc. 24
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory, select Lockdown mode from the drop-down
menu, and select Enter strict lockdown.
Procedure
u Right-click Host in theVMware Host Client inventory, select Lockdown mode from the drop-down
menu, and select Exit lockdown.
Procedure
You can view the information about the number and type of physical processors, and the number of
logical processors.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Right-click the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Edit settings.
VMware, Inc. 25
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 Under Scheduling Affinity, select physical processor affinity for the virtual machine.
VMware, Inc. 26
Virtual Machine Management
with the VMware Host Client 3
Virtual machines can be configured like physical computers and can perform the same tasks as physical
computers. Virtual machines also support special features that physical computers do not support.
You can use the VMware Host Client to create, register, and manage virtual machines, and to conduct
daily administrative and troubleshooting tasks.
n Deploying a Virtual Machine from an OVF or OVA File in the VMware Host Client
When you create a virtual machine, you associate it with a particular datastore and select an operating
system and virtual hardware options. After you power on the virtual machine, it consumes resources
dynamically as the workload increases, or returns resources dynamically as the workload decreases.
Every virtual machine has virtual devices that provide the same function as physical hardware. A virtual
machine gets CPU and memory, access to storage, and network connectivity from the host it runs on.
1 Start the Virtual Machine Creation Process in the VMware Host Client
You use the New Virtual Machine wizard to create a virtual machine to place in the
VMware Host Client inventory.
VMware, Inc. 27
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
2 Select a Method for Adding a New Virtual Machine on the Host with the VMware Host Client
You use the Select creation type page of the New Virtual Machine wizard to create a new virtual
machine, deploy a virtual machine from an OVF or OVA file, or register an existing virtual machine.
3 Select a Name and a Guest Operating System for the Virtual Machine in the VMware Host Client
When you create a new virtual machine, provide a unique name for the virtual machine to distinguish
it from existing virtual machines on the host you are managing. After you select a guest operating
system, the wizard provides the appropriate defaults for the operating system installation.
4 Select a Storage for Your Virtual Machine in the VMware Host Client
Select the datastore or datastore cluster to store the virtual machine configuration files and all of the
virtual disks in. You can select the datastore that has the most suitable properties, such as size,
speed, and availability, for your virtual machine storage.
The selections you make in the New Virtual Machine wizard are not saved until you click Finish on the
Ready to Complete page. If you close the wizard without completing all tasks, you cannot resume the
wizard where you left off. You must start a new creation task.
Prerequisites
Depending on the properties of the virtual machine you want to create, you might need the following
additional privileges:
n VirtualMachine.Config.AddNewDisk if including a virtual disk device that creates a new virtual disk
file (not RDM).
VMware, Inc. 28
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Datastore.AllocateSpace required on all datastores where the virtual machine and its virtual disks
are created.
n Network.Assign required on the network which is assigned to the new virtual machine that is being
created.
Procedure
u Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Create/Register VM.
Procedure
Option Description
Create a new virtual machine Creates a new virtual machine. You can customize processors, memory, network
connections, and storage. You will need to install a guest operating system after
you create the VM.
Deploy a virtual machine from an OVF Deploys a virtual machine from an OVF and VMDK files.
or OVA file OVA deployment is currently limited to files under 1 gigabyte in size due to Web
browser limitations.
If you want to deploy an OVA greater than 1 gigabyte, extract the OVA using tar
and provide the OVF and VMDK files separately.
Register an existing virtual machine Registers a virtual machine that already exists on a datastore.
The following procedure applies if you want to create a new virtual machine.
Procedure
2 Select the virtual machine compatibility from the Compatibility drop-down menu.
VMware, Inc. 29
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 Select the guest operating system family from the Guest OS family drop-down menu.
4 Select a guest operating system version from the Guest OS version drop-down menu.
5 (Optional) Select the Enable Windows Virtualization Based Security check box to enable VBS on
the virtual machine.
The Enable Windows Virtualization Based Security check box only appears if you chose a
Windows OS version that supports VBS and if the virtual machine's compatibility is ESXi 6.7 and
later.
Important Enabling VBS automatically exposes hardware assisted virtualization and IOMMU to the
guest OS and makes EFI and secure boot available.
6 Click Next.
Procedure
1 On the Select storage page, choose the type of storage for the virtual machine.
n Click the Standard button to save all the virtual machine disks and configuration files on a
standard datastore.
n Click the Persistent Memory button to save the virtual machine hard disks on the host-local
PMem datastore.
Important The configuration files cannot be stored on a PMem datastore. If you choose to use
PMem, you must select a regular datastore for the configuration files of the virtual machine.
3 Click Next.
For information about virtual machine options and virtual disk configuration, including instructions for
adding different types of devices, see vSphere Virtual Machine Administration.
VMware, Inc. 30
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 (Optional) On the Customize settings page, click Virtual Hardware and add a new virtual hardware
device.
n Click the Add hard disk icon to add a new virtual hard disk.
Note You can add a standard or a persistent memory hard disk to the virtual machine. The
persistent memory hard disk is stored on the host-local PMem datastore.
n Click the Add network adapter icon to add a NIC to the virtual machine.
n Click the Add other device icon to choose other type of device to add to the virtual machine.
Note If the virtual machine uses PMem storage, the hard disks that are stored on a PMem
datastore and the NVDIMM devices that you add to the virtual machine all share the same PMem
resources. So, you must adjust the size of the newly added devices in accordance with the
amount of the PMem available to the host. If any part of the configuration requires attention, the
wizard alerts you
Option Description
CPU The CPU or processor is the portion of a computer system that carries out the
instructions of a computer program and is the primary element carrying out the
computer's functions. CPUs contain cores. The number of virtual CPUs that are
available to a virtual machine depends on the number of licensed CPUs on the
host, and the number of CPUs supported by the guest operating system. To use
the VMware multicore virtual CPUs feature, you must comply with the
requirements of the guest operating system EULA.
Memory You can add, change, or configure virtual machine memory resources or options
to enhance virtual machine performance. You can set most of the memory
parameters during virtual machine creation or after the guest operating system is
installed. The memory resource settings for a virtual machine determine how
much of the host's memory is allocated to the virtual machine. The virtual
hardware memory size determines how much memory is available to applications
that run in the virtual machine.
Hard disk You can add large-capacity virtual disks to virtual machines and add more space
to existing disks, even when the virtual machine is running. You can set most of
the virtual disk parameters during virtual machine creation or after you install the
guest operating system.
SCSI controller Storage controllers appear to a virtual machine as different types of SCSI
controllers, including BusLogic Parallel, LSI Logic Parallel, LSI Logic SAS, and
VMware Paravirtual SCSI. You can set the type of SCSI bus sharing for a virtual
machine and indicate whether the SCSI bus is shared. Depending on the type of
sharing, virtual machines can access the same virtual disk simultaneously on the
same server or on any server. You can change the SCSI controller configuration
for a virtual machine on an ESXi host only.
VMware, Inc. 31
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Option Description
SATA controller If a virtual machine has multiple hard disks or CD/DVD-ROM devices, you can
add up to three additional SATA controllers to assign the devices to. When you
spread the devices among several controllers, you can improve performance and
avoid data traffic congestion. You can also add additional controllers if you exceed
the thirty-device limit for a single controller. You can boot virtual machines from
SATA controllers and use them for large-capacity virtual hard disks.
Network adapter When you configure a virtual machine, you can add network adapters (NICs) and
specify the adapter type. The type of network adapters that are available depend
on the following factors:
n The virtual machine compatibility, which depends on the host that created or
most recently updated it.
n Whether the virtual machine compatibility has been updated to the latest
version for the current host.
n The guest operating system.
CD/DVD drive You can configure DVD or CD devices to connect to client devices, host devices,
or Datastore ISO files.
This option appears only for virtual hardware that you can remove safely.
5 Click Next.
Procedure
1 On the Ready to complete page of the New Virtual Machine wizard, review the configuration settings
for the virtual machine.
2 Click Finish to complete the creation task and close the wizard.
The virtual machine appears in the VMware Host Client inventory under Virtual Machines.
What to do next
Before you can use the new virtual machine, you must partition and format the virtual drive, install a guest
operating system, and install VMware Tools. Typically, the operating system's installation application
handles partitioning and formatting the virtual drive.
You can map the virtual machine's CDROM/DVD to an ISO file and start the virtual machine. This action
triggers the operating system install.
VMware, Inc. 32
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
2 Deploy a Virtual Machine from an OVF or OVA File in the VMware Host Client
Use the New Virtual Machine wizard to deploy virtual machines from OVF and VMDK files, or from
OVA files.
3 Select OVF and VMDK, or OVA Files to Deploy in the VMware Host Client
Select the OVF and VMDK files, or OVA file for the virtual machine that you would like to deploy.
5 Complete the Deployment of a Virtual Machine from an OVF or OVA File in the VMware Host Client
In the Ready to complete page, review the configuration selections that you made for the virtual
machine.
OVA Limitations
You can upload OVA files by using either a Web browser or a client. The memory requirements are
significant and might cause the Web browser to stop responding or make the system unstable. The size
of the OVA file that can be uploaded depends on how much memory is available on your system. VMware
tests show that Google Chrome can upload OVA files of about 1 gigabyte. Mozilla Firefox can extract
larger OVA files, but might become unresponsive.
To deploy a large OVA file, VMware recommends to first extract the OVA on your system by running the
command tar -xvf <file.ova>. Then you can provide the deployment wizard with the OVF and VMDKs
as separate files.
OVF Limitations
The size of OVF files that a Web browser can upload are also limited. Different Web browsers have
different file size limits. Recent versions of Internet Explorer can upload OVF files up to 4 gigabytes in
size. Mozilla Firefox also has a 4-gigabyte limit. Google Chrome can handle larger files and there is no
documented limit.
VMware, Inc. 33
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
OVA deployment is limited to files under 1 gigabyte in size due to Web browser limitations. If you want to
deploy an OVA file greater than 1 gigabyte, extract the OVA file using tar and provide the OVF and VMDK
files separately.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Create/Register VM.
2 On the Select creation type page of the wizard, select Deploy a virtual machine from an OVF or
OVA file and click Next.
Procedure
Virtual machine names can contain up to 80 characters and must be unique within each ESXi
instance.
2 Click the blue pane to select an OVF and a VMDK, or an OVA file to deploy.
3 Select the file that you want to deploy your virtual machine from and click Open.
4 Click Next.
VMware, Inc. 34
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 On the Select storage page, choose the type of storage for the virtual machine.
n Click the Standard button to save all the virtual machine disks and configuration files on a
standard datastore.
n Click the Persistent Memory button to save the virtual machine hard disks on the host-local
PMem datastore.
Important The configuration files cannot be stored on a PMem datastore. If you choose to use
PMem, you must select a regular datastore for the configuration files of the virtual machine.
3 Click Next.
Procedure
1 On the Ready to complete page of the New Virtual Machine wizard, review the configuration settings
for the virtual machine.
3 (Optional) Click Cancel to discard the creation task and close the wizard.
4 Click Finish to complete the creation task and close the wizard.
The virtual machine appears in the VMware Host Client inventory under Virtual Machines.
VMware, Inc. 35
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Use the datastore browser to select either a datastore, a directory, or a .vmx file to add to the list of virtual
machines that you register. Selecting a datastore or directory searches for all .vmx files in that location.
You can browse more than once to append virtual machines to the list.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Create/Register VM.
The New virtual machine wizard allows you to select one or more virtual machines that you would like to
register. By selecting a datastore or a directory, you choose to register all virtual machines on that
datastore or in that directory.
Procedure
1 Click Select one or more virtual machines, a datastore, or a directory, locate the virtual machine
or virtual machines that you would like to register, and click Select.
2 (Optional) To remove a virtual machine from the list, select the name of the file and click Remove
selected.
3 (Optional) To clear your selection and start again, click Remove all.
4 Click Next.
Procedure
u Review your selections in the Ready to complete page of the New Virtual Machine wizard and click
Finish to register your virtual machine.
VMware, Inc. 36
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
You can use a browser console to gain access to the guest operating system without installing additional
software. For additional console functionalities, such as attaching local hardware, install VMware Remote
Console.
Note Currently browser consoles support only US, Japanese and German keyboard layouts. You must
select the desired keyboard layout before opening the console.
Procedure
3 Click the Console toolbar icon and select the Download VMRC option.
VMware, Inc. 37
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Virtual Machines in the VMware Host Client inventory and select a virtual machine from the list.
2 Click Console and select Launch remote console from the drop-down menu.
The VMware Remote Console opens as a stand-alone application for the selected virtual machine.
Procedure
3 Click the Console tool bar icon and select whether to open the console in a pop-up window, new
window, or a new tab.
Procedure
u Click Virtual Machines in the VMware Host Client inventory, select a virtual machine, and select your
task.
n To shut down a virtual machine, right-click the virtual machine and select Guest OS > Shut
down.
n To restart a virtual machine, right-click the virtual machine and select Guest OS > Restart.
VMware, Inc. 38
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
When you set the guest operating system type for a new virtual machine, vCenter Server applies
configuration defaults based on the type of guest operating system. Changing the guest operating system
type setting affects the available ranges and recommendations of the virtual machine settings.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 In the VMware Host Client inventory, right-click the virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
If you choose a Windows OS version that supports VBS and if the virtual machine's compatibility is
ESXi 6.7 and later, the VBS row appears on the VM Options tab.
Important Enabling VBS requires that you use EFI to boot the virtual machine. Changing the
firmware might make the guest OS unbootable.
The virtual machine configuration parameters for the guest operating system are changed. You can now
install the guest operating system.
n Pass messages from the host operating system to the guest operating system.
n Customize guest operating systems as a part of the vCenter Server and other VMware products.
n Run scripts that help automate guest operating system operations. The scripts run when the power
state of the virtual machine changes.
n Synchronize the time in the guest operating system with the time on the host operating system
VMware, Inc. 39
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
VMware Tools Lifecycle Management provides a simplified and scalable approach for installation and
upgrade of VMware Tools. It includes a number of feature enhancements, driver-related enhancements,
and support for new guest operating systems. Run the latest version of VMware Tools or use open-vm-
tools distributed with the Linux OS distribution. Although a guest operating system can run without
VMware Tools, always run the latest version of VMware Tools in your guest operating systems to access
the latest features and updates. You can configure your virtual machine to automatically check for and
apply VMware Tools upgrades each time you power on your virtual machines. For information about
enabling automatic upgrade of VMware Tools on your virtual machines, see vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration Guide
Installing VMware Tools is part of the process of creating new virtual machines. It is important to upgrade
VMware Tools as updates become available. For information about creating virtual machines, see the
Virtual Machine Administration Guide.
The installers for VMware Tools are ISO image files. An ISO image file looks like a CD-ROM to your guest
operating system. Each type of guest operating system, including Windows, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, and
NetWare, has an ISO image file. When you install or upgrade VMware Tools, the first virtual CD-ROM
disk drive of the virtual machine temporarily connects to the VMware Tools ISO file of your guest
operating system.
For information about installing or upgrading VMware Tools in Windows virtual machines, Linux virtual
machines, Mac OS X virtual machines, Solaris virtual machines, NetWare virtual machines, or FreeBSD
virtual machines, see Virtual Machine Administration Guide.
You can install VMware Tools in one or more virtual machines by using the VMware Host Client.
Procedure
3 Click Actions, select Guest OS from the drop-down menu, and select Install VMware Tools.
VMware, Inc. 40
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
The guest operating system checks the version of VMware Tools when you power on a virtual machine.
The status bar of your virtual machine displays a message when a new version is available.
In Windows virtual machines, you can set VMware Tools to notify you when an upgrade is available. If this
notification option is enabled, the VMware Tools icon in the Windows taskbar includes a yellow caution
icon when a VMware Tools upgrade is available.
To install a VMware Tools upgrade, you can use the same procedure that you used for installing VMware
Tools the first time. Upgrading VMware Tools means installing a new version.
For Windows and Linux guest operating systems, you can configure the virtual machine to automatically
upgrade VMware Tools. Although the version check is performed when you power on the virtual machine,
on Windows guest operating systems, the automatic upgrade occurs when you power off or restart the
virtual machine. The status bar displays the message Installing VMware Tools ... when an
upgrade is in progress. The procedure is mentioned below.
Note Upgrading VMware Tools on Windows guest operation systems automatically installs the WDDM
graphics drivers. The WDDM graphics driver allows the sleep mode available in guest OS power settings
to adjust the sleep options. For example, you can use the sleep mode setting Change when the
computer sleeps to configure your guest OS to automatically go to sleep mode after a certain time or
prevent your guest OS from automatically switching to sleep mode after being idle for some time.
For vSphere virtual machines, you can use one of the following processes to upgrade multiple virtual
machines at the same time.
n Log in to vCenter Server, select a host or cluster, and on the Virtual Machines tab specify the virtual
machines on which to perform a VMware Tools upgrade.
n Use Update Manager to perform an orchestrated upgrade of virtual machines at the folder or
datacenter level.
Some features in a particular release of a VMware product might depend on installing or upgrading to the
version of VMware Tools included in that release. Upgrading to the latest version of VMware Tools is not
always necessary. Newer versions of VMware Tools are compatible with several host versions. To avoid
unnecessary upgrades, evaluate whether the added features and capabilities are necessary for your
environment.
ESXi 6.7 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 14) is compatible with ESXi 6.7.
ESXi 6.5 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 13) is compatible with ESXi 6.5 and ESXi 6.7 .
ESXi 6.0 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 11) is compatible with ESXi 6.0, ESXi 6.5, and ESXi
6.7.
VMware, Inc. 41
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
ESXi 5.5 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 10) is compatible with ESXi 5.5, ESXi 6.0, ESXi 6.5,
and ESXi 6.7.
ESXi 5.1 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 9) is compatible with ESXi 5.1, ESXi 5.5, ESXi 6.0,
ESXi 6.5, and ESXi 6.7.
ESXi 5.0 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 8) is compatible with ESXi 5.0, ESXi 5.1, ESXi 5.5,
ESXi 6.0, ESXi 6.5, and ESXi 6.7.
ESX/ESXi 4.x and later This virtual machine (hardware version 7) is compatible with ESX/ ESXi 4.x, ESXi 5.0, ESXi
5.1, ESXi 5.5, ESXi 6.0, ESXi 6.5, and ESXi 6.7.
ESX/ESXi 3.5 and later This virtual machine (hardware version 4) is compatible with ESX/ESX 3.5. ESX/ESX 4.x, and
ESXi 5.1. It is also compatible with VMware Server 1.0 and later. You cannot create a virtual
machine with ESX/ESXi 3.5 compatibility on ESXi 5.0.
For more information, see the documentation for your specific VMware product.
Prerequisites
Procedure
3 Click Actions, select Guest OS from the drop-down menu, and select Upgrade VMware Tools.
Options View and configure a number of virtual machine properties such as power
management interaction between the guest operating system and the
virtual machine, and VMware Tools settings.
VMware, Inc. 42
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 Click VM Options.
4 In the VM Name text box, enter a new name for the virtual machine.
5 Click Save.
Prerequisites
Procedure
VMware, Inc. 43
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
4 Record the location of the configuration files and the working files.
You can modify many virtual machine configurations while the virtual machine is running, but you might
need to change the virtual machine power state for some configurations.
You cannot configure a Power on ( ) action. This action powers on a virtual machine that is stopped,
or starts a virtual machine and runs a script if the virtual machine is suspended and VMware Tools is
installed and available. If VMware Tools is not installed, it starts the suspended virtual machine and does
not run a script.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have privileges to perform the intended power operation on the virtual machine.
n To set optional power functions, install VMware Tools on the virtual machine.
n Power off the virtual machine before editing the VMware Tools options.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine from the list and select Edit settings from the drop-down menu.
4
Select an option for the virtual machine Power off ( ) control from the drop-down menu.
Option Description
Power Off Immediately stops the virtual machine. A Power Off action shuts down the guest
operating system or powers off the virtual machine. A message indicates that the
guest operating system might not shut down properly. Use this power off option
only when necessary.
Shut Down Guest Uses VMware Tools to initiate an orderly system shut down of the virtual machine.
Soft power operations are possible only if the tools are installed in the guest
operating system.
System Default Follows system settings. The current value of the system settings appears in
parentheses.
VMware, Inc. 44
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
5
Select an option for the Suspend ( ) control from the drop-down menu.
Option Description
Suspend Pauses all virtual machine activity. When VMware Tools is installed and available,
a suspend action runs a script and suspends the virtual machine. If VMware Tools
is not installed, a Suspend action suspends the virtual machine without running a
script.
Put Guest on Standby Puts the guest operating system on standby. This option stops all processes, but
all virtual devices remain connected to the virtual machine.
System Default Follows system settings. The current value of the system settings appears in
parentheses.
6
Select an option for the Reset ( ) control from the drop-down menu.
Option Description
Reset Shuts down and restarts the guest operating system without powering off the
virtual machine. If VMware Tools is not installed, a Reset action resets the virtual
machine.
Restart Guest Uses VMware Tools to initiate an orderly restart. Soft power operations are
possible only if the tools are installed in the guest operating system.
Default Follows system settings. The current value of the system settings appears in
parentheses.
7 Click Save.
Important Changing or adding parameters when a system does not have problems might lead to
decreased system performance and instability.
n To change a parameter, you must change the existing value for the keyword/value pair. For example,
if the existing pair is keyword/value, and you change it to keyword/value2, the new keyword is value2.
Caution You must assign a value to configuration parameter keywords. If you do not assign a value, the
keyword might receive a value of 0, false, or disable, which might result in a virtual machine that cannot
power on.
Prerequisites
VMware, Inc. 45
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
5 (Optional) To add a parameter, click Add Parameter and enter a name and value for the parameter.
6 (Optional) To change a parameter, type a new value in the Value text box for that parameter.
7 Click OK to save your changes and exit the Configuration Parameters dialog box.
8 Click Save.
Procedure
3 Select Autostart from the pop-up menu and click an option to configure the auto start options for this
virtual machine.
Option Description
Increase priority Increase the start priority of this virtual machine so it starts before other virtual
machines.
Decrease priority Decrease the start priority of this virtual machine so it starts after other virtual
machines.
For information about virtual machine hardware versions and compatibility, see vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration.
VMware, Inc. 46
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
n Create a backup or snapshot of the virtual machines. See Using Snapshots To Manage Virtual
Machines.
n Upgrade VMware Tools. On virtual machines that run Microsoft Windows, if you upgrade the
compatibility before you upgrade VMware Tools, the virtual machine might lose its network settings.
n Verify that all .vmdk files are available to the ESXi host on a VMFS3, VMFS5, or NFS datastore.
n Verify that the virtual machine is stored on VMFS3, VMFS5 or NFS datastores.
n Verify that the compatibility settings for the virtual machines are not set to the latest supported
version.
n Determine the ESXi versions that you want the virtual machines to be compatible with. See vSphere
Virtual Machine Administration.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine from the list and select Upgrade VM Compatibility from the pop-up
menu.
VMware uses the following terminology. Understanding these terms can help you plan your strategy for
CPU resource allocation.
Core A core contains a unit containing an L1 cache and functional units needed
to run applications. Cores can independently run applications or threads.
One or more cores can exist on a single CPU.
VMware, Inc. 47
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Resource sharing Shares specify the relative priority or importance of a virtual machine or
resource pool. If a virtual machine has twice as many shares of a resource
as another virtual machine, it is entitled to consume twice as much of that
resource when the two virtual machines are competing for resources.
Resource allocation You can change CPU resource allocation settings, such as shares,
reservation, and limit, when available resource capacity does not meet
demands. For example, if at year end, the workload on accounting
increases, you can increase the accounting resource pool reserve.
vSphere Virtual Virtual SMP or vSphere Virtual Symmetric Multiprocessing is a feature that
Symmetric enables a single virtual machine to have multiple processors.
Multiprocessing (Virtual
SMP)
n A virtual machine cannot have more virtual CPUs than the number of logical cores on the host. The
number of logical cores is equal to the number of physical cores if hyperthreading is disabled or two
times that number if hyperthreading is enabled.
n Not every guest operating system supports Virtual SMP, and guest operating systems that support
this functionality might support fewer processors than are available on the host. For information about
Virtual SMP support, see the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
n Hyperthreaded hosts might affect virtual machine performance, depending on the workload. The best
practice is to test your workload to determine whether to enable or disable hyperthreading on your
hosts.
Important When you configure your virtual machine for multicore virtual CPU settings, you must ensure
that your configuration complies with the requirements of the guest operating system EULA.
Using multicore virtual CPUs can be useful when you run operating systems or applications that can take
advantage of only a limited number of CPU sockets.
VMware, Inc. 48
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
You can configure a virtual machine that runs on an ESXi host 6.0 and later to have up to 128 virtual
CPUs. A virtual machine cannot have more virtual CPUs than the actual number of logical CPUs on the
host. The number of logical CPUs means the number of physical processor cores or two times that
number if hyperthreading is enabled. For example, if a host has 128 logical CPUs, you can configure the
virtual machine for 128 virtual CPUs.
You configure how the virtual CPUs are assigned in terms of cores and cores per socket. Determine how
many CPU cores you want in the virtual machine, then select the number of cores you want in each
socket, depending on whether you want a single core CPU, dual-core CPU, tri-core CPU, and so on. Your
selection determines the number of sockets that the virtual machine has.
For more information about multicore CPUs, see the vSphere Resource Management documentation.
Virtual CPU hot add is supported for virtual machines with multicore CPU support and ESXi 5.0 and later
compatibility. When the virtual machine is turned on and CPU hot add is enabled, you can hot add virtual
CPUs to running virtual machines. The number of CPUs that you add must be a multiple of the number of
cores that exist on each socket.
Important When you configure your virtual machine for multicore virtual CPU settings, you must ensure
that your configuration complies with the requirements of the guest operating system EULA.
Prerequisites
n If virtual CPU hot add is not enabled, turn off the virtual machine before adding virtual CPUs.
n To hot add multicore CPUs, verify that the virtual machine is compatible with ESXi 5.0 and later.
n Verify that you have the Virtual Machine.Configuration.Change CPU Count privilege.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand CPU, and select the number of cores from the CPU drop-down
menu.
4 Select the number of cores per socket from the Cores Per Socket drop-down menu.
5 Click Save.
VMware, Inc. 49
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
A virtual machine has the following user-defined settings that affect its CPU resource allocation.
Limit Places a limit on the consumption of CPU time for a virtual machine. This
value is expressed in MHz or GHz.
Reservation Specifies the guaranteed minimum allocation for a virtual machine. The
reservation is expressed in MHz or GHz.
Shares Each virtual machine is granted CPU shares. The more shares a virtual
machine has, the more often it receives a time slice of a CPU when there is
no CPU idle time. Shares represent a relative metric for allocating CPU
capacity.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand CPU, and allocate CPU capacity for the virtual machine.
Option Description
Limit Upper limit for this virtual machine’s CPU allocation. Select Unlimited to specify
no upper limit.
Shares CPU shares for this virtual machine in relation to the parent’s total. Sibling virtual
machines share resources according to their relative share values bounded by
the reservation and limit. Select Low, Normal, or High, which specify share
values respectively in a 1:2:4 ratio. Select Custom to give each virtual machine a
specific number of shares, which express a proportional weight.
4 Click Save.
The memory resource settings for a virtual machine determine how much of the host's memory is
allocated to the virtual machine. The virtual hardware memory size determines how much memory is
available to applications that run in the virtual machine. A virtual machine cannot benefit from more
memory resources than its configured virtual hardware memory size. ESXi hosts limit the memory
resource use to the maximum amount useful for the virtual machine, so that you can accept the default of
Unlimited memory resources.
VMware, Inc. 50
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Minimum memory size is 4MB for virtual machines that use BIOS firmware. Virtual machines that use EFI
firmware require at least 96MB of RAM or they cannot power on.
Maximum memory size for a virtual machine depends on the host's physical memory and the virtual
machine's compatibility setting.
If the virtual machine memory is greater than the host memory size, swapping occurs, which can have a
severe effect on virtual machine performance. The maximum for best performance represents the
threshold above which the host’s physical memory is insufficient to run the virtual machine at full speed.
This value fluctuates as conditions on the host change, for example, as virtual machines are powered on
or off.
The ESXi host version indicates when support began for the increased memory size. For example, the
memory size of a virtual machine with ESX/ESXi 3.5 and later compatibility running on ESXi 5.0 is
restricted to 65,532MB.
Prerequisites
Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Memory privilege on the virtual machine.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
VMware, Inc. 51
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
4 In the RAM text box, type the amount of RAM to assign to the virtual machine or select one of the
suggested values from the drop-down menu.
6 Click Save.
The following user-defined settings affect the memory resource allocation of a virtual machine.
Limit Places a limit on the consumption of memory for a virtual machine. This
value is expressed in megabytes.
Reservation Specifies the guaranteed minimum allocation for a virtual machine. The
reservation is expressed in megabytes. If the reservation cannot be met,
the virtual machine will not turn on.
Shares Each virtual machine is granted a number of memory shares. The more
shares a virtual machine has, the greater share of host memory it receives.
Shares represent a relative metric for allocating memory capacity. For more
information about share values, see the vSphere Resource Management
documentation.
You cannot assign a reservation to a virtual machine that is larger than the virtual machine's configured
memory. If you give a virtual machine a large reservation and reduce the virtual machine's configured
memory size, the reservation is reduced to match the new configured memory size.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
VMware, Inc. 52
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand Memory, and allocate the memory capacity for the virtual
machine.
Option Description
Limit Upper limit for this virtual machine’s memory allocation. Select Unlimited to
specify no upper limit.
Shares The values Low, Normal, High, and Custom are compared to the sum of all
shares of all virtual machines on the server.
4 Click Save.
Enabling memory hot add produces extra memory overhead on the ESXi host for the virtual machine.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the virtual machine has a guest operating system that supports memory hot add
capabilities.
n Verify that the virtual machine compatibility is ESXi 4.x and later.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand Memory and enable Memory Hot Plug.
4 Click Save.
Virtual machines consume the PMem resource of the host through a virtual non-volatile dual in-line
memory module (NVDIMM) or through a virtual persistent memory disk.
For more information about persistent memory, see Managing Persistent Memory in the VMware Host
Client
VMware, Inc. 53
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
n Verify that the host or the cluster on which the virtual machine resides has available PMem resources.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 Under the Virtual Hardware tab, click Add other device and select NVDIMM from the drop-down
menu.
The NVDIMM device appears in the Virtual Hardware devices list. Each virtual machine can have a
maximum of 64 NVDIMM devices.
Note You can change the size of the NVDIMM device at a later time. The virtual machine must
be powered off.
The networking features also allow management of ESXi hosts and enable communication between
VMkernel services, such as NFS, iSCSI, or vSphere vMotion, and the physical network. When you
configure networking for a virtual machine, you select or change an adapter type, a network connection,
and whether to connect the network when the virtual machine powers on.
The type of network adapters that are available depend on the following factors:
n The virtual machine compatibility, which depends on the host that created or most recently updated it.
VMware, Inc. 54
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Whether the virtual machine compatibility has been updated to the latest version for the current host.
Supported NICs currently differ between an on-premises environment and VMware Cloud on AWS. The
following NIC types are supported in an on-premises deployment:
E1000E Emulated version of the Intel 82574 Gigabit Ethernet NIC. E1000E is the
default adapter for Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012.
E1000 Emulated version of the Intel 82545EM Gigabit Ethernet NIC, with drivers
available in most newer guest operating systems, including Windows XP
and later and Linux versions 2.4.19 and later.
Flexible Identifies itself as a Vlance adapter when a virtual machine boots, but
initializes itself and functions as either a Vlance or a VMXNET adapter,
depending on which driver initializes it. With VMware Tools installed, the
VMXNET driver changes the Vlance adapter to the higher performance
VMXNET adapter.
Vlance Emulated version of the AMD 79C970 PCnet32 LANCE NIC, an older 10
Mbps NIC with drivers available in 32-bit legacy guest operating systems. A
virtual machine configured with this network adapter can use its network
immediately.
VMXNET 2 (Enhanced) Based on the VMXNET adapter but provides high-performance features
commonly used on modern networks, such as jumbo frames and hardware
offloads. VMXNET 2 (Enhanced) is available only for some guest operating
systems on ESX/ESXi 3.5 and later.
VMXNET 3 A paravirtualized NIC designed for performance. VMXNET 3 offers all the
features available in VMXNET 2 and adds several new features, such as
multiqueue support (also known as Receive Side Scaling in Windows), IPv6
offloads, and MSI/MSI-X interrupt delivery. VMXNET 3 is not related to
VMXNET or VMXNET 2.
VMware, Inc. 55
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
PVRDMA A paravirtualized NIC that supports remote direct memory access (RDMA)
between virtual machines through the OFED verbs API. All virtual machines
must have a PVRDMA device and should be connected to a distributed
switch. PVRDMA supports VMware vSphere vMotion and snapshot
technology. It is available in virtual machines with hardware version 13 and
guest operating system Linux kernel 4.6 and later.
SR-IOV passthrough Representation of a virtual function (VF) on a physical NIC with SR-IOV
support. The virtual machine and the physical adapter exchange data
without using the VMkernel as an intermediary. This adapter type is suitable
for virtual machines where latency might cause failure or that require more
CPU resources.
SR-IOV passthrough is available in ESXi 6.0 and later for guest operating
systems Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and later, and Windows Server 2008
R2 with SP2. An operating system release might contain a default VF driver
for certain NICs, while for others you must download and install it from a
location provided by the vendor of the NIC or of the host.
For network adapter compatibility considerations, see the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
The default network adapter types for all legacy virtual machines depend on the adapters available and
compatible to the guest operating system and the version of virtual hardware on which the virtual machine
was created.
If you do not upgrade a virtual machine to use a virtual hardware version, your adapter settings remain
unchanged. If you upgrade your virtual machine to take advantage of newer virtual hardware, your default
adapter settings will likely change to be compatible with the guest operating system and upgraded host
hardware.
To verify the network adapters that are available to your supported guest operating system for a particular
version of vSphere ESXi, see the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
VMware, Inc. 56
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
If you do not upgrade a virtual machine to correspond with an upgrade to a newer version of an ESXi
host, your adapter settings remain unchanged. If you upgrade your virtual machine to take advantage of
newer virtual hardware, your default adapter settings will likely change to be compatible with the guest
operating system and upgraded host hardware.
To verify the network adapters that are available to your supported guest operating system for a particular
version of vSphere ESXi, see the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
Prerequisites
Required privileges:
n Virtual Machine.Configuration.Modify device settings for editing the MAC address and network.
n Virtual Machine.Interaction.Device connection for changing Connect and Connect at power on.
n Network.Assign network
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 Click the Virtual Hardware tab and select the appropriate Network Adapter (NIC) from the hardware
list.
4 (Optional) To connect the virtual NIC when the virtual machine is powered on, select Connect at
power on.
5 (Optional) Select the adapter type from the Adapter Type drop-down menu.
Option Description
7 Click Save.
VMware, Inc. 57
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 Click the Virtual Hardware tab and click Add network adapter.
4 In the network connection panel, select either a network with a specific label or a legacy network.
5 (Optional) To configure the virtual NIC to connect when the virtual machine is powered on, select
Connect at power on.
6 Click Save.
You can store virtual machine data in a new virtual disk, an existing virtual disk, or a mapped SAN LUN. A
virtual disk appears as a single hard disk to the guest operating system. The virtual disk is composed of
one or more files on the host file system. You can copy or move virtual disks on the same hosts or
between hosts.
For virtual machines running on an ESXi host, you can store virtual machine data directly on a SAN LUN
instead of using a virtual disk file. This option is useful if in your virtual machines you run applications that
must detect the physical characteristics of the storage device. Mapping a SAN LUN also allows you to
use existing SAN commands to manage storage for the disk.
To accelerate virtual machine performance, you can configure virtual machines to use vSphere Flash
Read Cache™. For details about Flash Read Cache behavior, see the vSphere Storage documentation.
When you map a LUN to a VMFS volume, vCenter Server or the ESXi host creates a raw device mapping
(RDM) file that points to the raw LUN. Encapsulating disk information in a file allows vCenter Server or the
ESXi host to lock the LUN so that only one virtual machine can write to it. This file has a .vmdk extension,
but the file contains only disk information that describes the mapping to the LUN on the ESXi system. The
actual data is stored on the LUN. You cannot deploy a virtual machine from a template and store its data
on a LUN. You can store its data only in a virtual disk file.
The amount of free space in the datastore is always changing. Ensure that you leave sufficient space for
virtual machine creation and other virtual machine operations, such as growth of sparse files, snapshots,
and so on. To review space utilization for the datastore by file type, see the vSphere Monitoring and
Performance documentation.
Thin provisioning lets you create sparse files with blocks that are allocated upon first access, which allows
the datastore to be over-provisioned. The sparse files can continue growing and fill the datastore. If the
datastore runs out of disk space while the virtual machine is running, it can cause the virtual machine to
stop functioning.
VMware, Inc. 58
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
NFS datastores with Hardware Acceleration and VMFS datastores support the following disk provisioning
policies. On NFS datastores that do not support Hardware Acceleration, only thin format is available.
You can use Storage vMotion or cross-host Storage vMotion to transform virtual disks from one format to
another.
Thick Provision Lazy Creates a virtual disk in a default thick format. Space required for the virtual
Zeroed disk is allocated when the disk is created. Data remaining on the physical
device is not erased during creation, but is zeroed out on demand later on
first write from the virtual machine. Virtual machines do not read stale data
from the physical device.
Thick Provision Eager A type of thick virtual disk that supports clustering features such as Fault
Zeroed Tolerance. Space required for the virtual disk is allocated at creation time.
In contrast to the thick provision lazy zeroed format, the data remaining on
the physical device is zeroed out when the virtual disk is created. It might
take longer to create virtual disks in this format than to create other types of
disks. Increasing the size of an Eager Zeroed Thick virtual disk causes a
significant stun time for the virtual machine.
Thin Provision Use this format to save storage space. For the thin disk, you provision as
much datastore space as the disk would require based on the value that
you enter for the virtual disk size. However, the thin disk starts small and at
first, uses only as much datastore space as the disk needs for its initial
operations. If the thin disk needs more space later, it can grow to its
maximum capacity and occupy the entire datastore space provisioned to it.
Thin provisioning is the fastest method to create a virtual disk because it
creates a disk with just the header information. It does not allocate or zero
out storage blocks. Storage blocks are allocated and zeroed out when they
are first accessed.
VMware, Inc. 59
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand the hard disk to view all disk options.
4 (Optional) To change the size of the disk, enter a new value in the text box and select the units from
the drop-down menu.
5 (Optional) To change the way that disks are affected by snapshots, select a disk mode from the Disk
Mode drop-down menu.
Option Description
Independent-Persistent Disks in persistent mode behave like conventional disks on your physical
computer. All data written to a disk in persistent mode are written permanently to
the disk.
Independent-Nonpersistent Changes to disks in nonpersistent mode are discarded when you turn off or reset
the virtual machine. With nonpersistent mode, you can restart the virtual machine
with a virtual disk in the same state every time. Changes to the disk are written to
and read from a redo log file that is deleted when you turn off or reset the virtual
machine.
6 Click Save.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you are familiar with configuration options and caveats for adding virtual hard disks. See
Virtual Disk Configuration.
n Before you add disks larger than 2TB in size to a virtual machine, see vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration.
VMware, Inc. 60
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk privilege on the destination
folder or datastore.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 (Optional) To delete an existing hard disk, move your pointer over the disk and click the Remove icon
(X).
The disk is removed from the virtual machine. If other virtual machines share the disk, the disk files
are not deleted.
4 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add hard disk and select New standard hard disk from the
drop-down menu.
6 (Optional) Enter a value for the hard disk size and select the units from the drop-down menu.
7 Select the datastore location where you want to store the virtual machine files.
Option Description
Thick Provision Lazy Zeroed Create a virtual disk in a default thick format. Space required for the virtual disk is
allocated during creation. Any data remaining on the physical device is not erased
during creation, but is zeroed out on demand at a later time on first write from the
virtual machine.
Thick Provision Eager Zeroed Create a thick disk that supports clustering features such as Fault Tolerance.
Space required for the virtual disk is allocated at creation time. In contrast to the
flat format, the data remaining on the physical device is zeroed out during
creation. It might take much longer to create disks in this format than to create
other types of disks.
Thin Provision Use the thin provisioned format. At first, a thin provisioned disk uses only as much
datastore space as the disk initially requires. If the thin disk needs more space
later, it can grow to the maximum capacity allocated to it.
9 In the Shares drop-down menu, select a value for the shares to allocate to the virtual disk.
Shares is a value that represents the relative metric for controlling disk bandwidth. The values Low,
Normal, High, and Custom are compared to the sum of all shares of all virtual machines on the host.
11 In the Limit IOPs box, enter the upper limit of storage resources to allocate to the virtual machine, or
select Unlimited.
This value is the upper limit of I/O operations per second allocated to the virtual disk.
VMware, Inc. 61
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
In most cases, you can accept the default device node. For a hard disk, using a nondefault device
node makes controlling the boot order or having different SCSI controller types easier. For example,
you might want to boot from an LSI Logic controller and share a data disk with another virtual
machine that is using a Buslogic controller with bus sharing turned on.
Option Description
Independent-Persistent Disks in persistent mode behave like conventional physical computer disks. All
data written to a disk in persistent mode are written permanently to the disk.
Independent-Nonpersistent Changes to disks in nonpersistent mode are discarded when you power off or
reset the virtual machine. The virtual disk returns to the same state every time
you restart the virtual machine. Changes to the disk are written to and read from a
redo log file that is deleted when you power off or reset.
14 Click Save.
Add an Existing Hard Disk to a Virtual Machine in the VMware Host Client
You can add an existing virtual hard disk to a virtual machine when you customize the virtual machine
hardware during the virtual machine creation process or after the virtual machine is created. For example,
you might want to add an existing hard disk that is preconfigured as a boot disk.
During virtual machine creation, a hard disk and a SCSI or SATA controller are added to the virtual
machine by default, based on the guest operating system that you select. If this disk does not meet your
needs, you can remove it and add an existing hard disk at the end of the creation process.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you are familiar with controller and virtual device node behavior for different virtual hard
disk configurations.
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add existing disk privilege on the
destination folder or datastore.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add hard disk and select Existing hard disk from the drop-
down menu.
VMware, Inc. 62
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
4 (Optional) To delete an existing hard disk, move your pointer over the disk and click the Remove icon
(X).
The disk is removed from the virtual machine. If other virtual machines share the disk, the disk files
are not deleted.
5 In the Datastore column, expand a datastore, select a virtual machine folder, and select the disk to
add.
The disk file appears in the Contents column. The File type menu shows the compatibility file types
for this disk.
6 Click Select and click Save to add the existing hard disk.
During virtual machine creation, a hard disk and a SCSI or SATA controller are added to the virtual
machine by default, based on the guest operating system that you select. If this disk does not meet your
needs, you can remove it and add an existing hard disk at the end of the creation process.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you are familiar with configuration options and caveats for adding virtual hard disks. See
Virtual Disk Configuration.
n Before you add disks larger than 2TB in size to a virtual machine, see vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration.
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk privilege on the destination
folder or datastore.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add hard disk and select New persistent memory disk from
the drop-down menu.
The hard disk appears in the Virtual Hardware devices list. By default, the disk is stored on the host-
local PMem datastore and you cannot change the datastore.
VMware, Inc. 63
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
4 (Optional) Configure the settings for the new hard disk and click Save to close the wizard.
b Enter a value for the hard disk size and select the units from the drop-down menu.
Note All persistent memory hard disks and NVDIMM modules that you add to the virtual
machine share the same PMem resources. So, you must adjust the size of the newly added
persistent memory devices in accordance with the amount of the PMem available to the host. If
any part of the configuration requires attention, the wizard alerts you.
c From the Shares drop-down menu, select a value for the shares to allocate to the virtual disk.
Shares is a value that represents the relative metric for controlling disk bandwidth. The values
Low, Normal, High, and Custom are compared to the sum of all shares of all virtual machines on
the host.
d From the Controller location drop-down menu, select the location of the controller that the new
hard disk uses.
Option Description
Independent-Persistent Disks in persistent mode behave like conventional physical computer disks. All
data written to a disk in persistent mode are written permanently to the disk.
Independent-Nonpersistent Changes to disks in nonpersistent mode are discarded when you power off or
reset the virtual machine. The virtual disk returns to the same state every time
you restart the virtual machine. Changes to the disk are written to and read
from a redo log file that is deleted when you power off or reset.
Use Disk Shares to Prioritize Virtual Machines in the VMware Host Client
You can change the disk resources for a virtual machine. If multiple virtual machines access the same
VMFS datastore and the same logical unit number (LUN), use disk shares to prioritize the level of access
that virtual machines have to resources. Disk shares distinguish high-priority from low-priority virtual
machines.
You can allocate the I/O bandwidth of the host to the virtual hard disks of a virtual machine. You cannot
pool disk I/O across a cluster.
The shares value represents the relative metric for controlling disk bandwidth to all virtual machines.
Disk shares are relevant only within a given host. The shares assigned to virtual machines on one host
have no effect on virtual machines on other hosts.
You can select an IOP limit, which sets an upper limit for storage resources that are allocated to a virtual
machine. IOPs are the number of I/O operations per second.
Prerequisites
VMware, Inc. 64
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand the hard disk to view the disk options.
4 In the Shares drop-down menu, select a value for the shares to allocate to the virtual machine.
6 In the Limit - IOPs text box, enter the upper limit of storage resources to allocate to the virtual
machine, or select Unlimited.
7 Click Save.
You can add one virtual xHCI controller, one virtual EHCI controller, and one virtual UHCI controller per
virtual machine. With Hardware Version 11, the supported number of root hub ports per xHCI controller is
eight (four logical USB 3.0 ports and four logical USB 2.0 ports).
The conditions for adding a controller vary, depending on the device version, the type of passthrough
(host or client computer), and the guest operating system.
xHCI 3.0, 2.0, and 1.1 Yes (USB 3.0, 2.0, and 1.1 Yes (Linux, Windows 8 and later, and
devices only) Windows Server 2012 and later guests)
For Mac OS X systems, the EHCI+UHCI controller is enabled by default and is required for USB mouse
and keyboard access.
For virtual machines with Linux guests, you can add one or both controllers, but 3.0 superspeed devices
are not supported for passthrough from an ESXi host to a virtual machine. You cannot add two controllers
of the same type.
VMware, Inc. 65
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
For USB passthrough from an ESXi host to a virtual machine, the USB arbitrator can monitor a maximum
of 15 USB controllers. If your system includes controllers that exceed the 15 controller limit and you
connect USB devices to them, the devices are not available to the virtual machine.
Prerequisites
n ESXi hosts must have USB controller hardware and modules that support USB 3.0, 2.0, and 1.1
devices present.
n Client computers must have USB controller hardware and modules that support USB 3.0, 2.0, and 1.1
devices present.
n To use the xHCI controller on a Linux guest, ensure that the Linux kernel version is 2.6.35 or later.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, click Add other device, and click USB Controller from the drop-down
menu.
The new USB controller appears at the bottom of the Virtual Hardware device list.
If compatibility errors appear, fix them before you add the controller.
5 Click Save.
What to do next
Adding a new hard disk on an unused SCSI Bus number creates a new SCSI controller.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
VMware, Inc. 66
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add hard disk and select New hard disk from the drop-down
menu.
5 In the Controller location section, select an unused SCSI Bus number from the drop-down menu.
For example, bus and device numbers 0:0 - 0:15 are used by the initial SCSI controller. The second
SCSI controller uses bus and device numbers 1:0 - 1:15.
6 Click Save.
The new hard disk and new SCSI controller are simultaneously created.
Change the SCSI Bus Sharing Configuration in the VMware Host Client
You can set the type of SCSI bus sharing for a virtual machine and indicate whether to share the SCSI
bus. Depending on the type of sharing, virtual machines can access the same virtual disk simultaneously
on the same server or on any server.
You can change the SCSI controller configuration for a virtual machine only if the virtual machine is on an
ESXi host.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, expand the SCSI Controller that you want to edit.
Option Description
Virtual Virtual disks can be shared by virtual machines on the same server.
5 Click Save.
The choice of SCSI controller does not affect whether your virtual disk is an IDE or SCSI disk. The IDE
adapter is always ATAPI. The default for your guest operating system is already selected. Older guest
operating systems have BusLogic adapter as their default controller.
VMware, Inc. 67
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
If you create an LSI Logic virtual machine and add a virtual disk that uses BusLogic adapters, the virtual
machine boots from the BusLogic adapters disk. LSI Logic SAS is available only for virtual machines with
hardware version 7 or later. Disks with snapshots might not experience performance gains when used on
LSI Logic SAS, VMware Paravirtual, and LSI Logic Parallel adapters.
Caution Changing the SCSI controller type might result in a virtual machine boot failure.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
5 Click Save.
VMware Paravirtual SCSI controllers are available for virtual machines with ESXi 4.x and later
compatibility. Disks on such controllers might not experience optimal performance gains if they have
snapshots or if memory on the ESXi host is over committed. This behavior does not mitigate the overall
performance gain of using VMware Paravirtual SCSI controllers as compared to other SCSI controller
options.
If you have virtual machines with VMware Paravirtual SCSI controllers, those virtual machines cannot be
part of an MSCS cluster.
For platform support for VMware Paravirtual SCSI controllers, see the VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
VMware Paravirtual SCSI controllers are best suited for environments, especially SAN environments, that
run I/O-intensive applications.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the virtual machine has a guest operating system with VMware Tools installed.
VMware, Inc. 68
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Familiarize yourself with VMware Paravirtual SCSI limitations. See vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration.
n To access boot disk devices attached to a VMware Paravirtual SCSI controller, verify that the virtual
machine has a Windows 2003 or Windows 2008 guest operating system.
n In some operating systems, before you change the controller type you must create a virtual machine
with an LSI Logic controller and install VMware Tools.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, click Add other device and select SCSI Controller from the drop-
down menu.
4 Click on the New SCSI Controller and select VMware Paravirtual from the drop-down menu.
5 Click Save.
You can boot virtual machines from SATA controllers and use them for large-capacity virtual hard disks.
Not all guest operating systems support AHCI SATA controllers. Typically, when you create virtual
machines with ESXi 5.5 and later compatibility and Mac OS X guest operating systems, a SATA controller
is added by default for the virtual hard disk and CD/DVD-ROM devices. Most guest operating systems,
including Windows Vista and later, have a default SATA controller for CD/DVD-ROM devices. For
verification, see the appropriate VMware Compatibility Guide at
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the virtual machine compatibility is ESXi 5.5 and later.
n Verify that you are familiar with storage controller behavior and limitations. See vSphere Virtual
Machine Administration.
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device privilege on the
virtual machine.
VMware, Inc. 69
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add other device, and select SATA Controller from the drop-
down menu.
4 Click Save.
NVMe controllers perform best with virtual disks on an all-flash disk array, local NVMe SSD, and PMem
storage.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the virtual machine has a guest operating system that supports NVMe.
n Verify that you are familiar with storage controllers behavior and limitations. For more information, see
the Virtual Machine Administration guide.
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add new disk privilege on the virtual
machine.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 Under the Virtual Hardware tab, click the Add other device icon and select NVMe controller from
the drop-down menu.
What to do next
You can add a hard disk to the virtual machine and assign it to the NVMe controller.
VMware, Inc. 70
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
If you want to add a CD/DVD drive that is backed up by USB CD/DVD drive on the host, you must add
the drive as a SCSI device. Hot adding or removing SCSI devices from an ESXi host is not supported.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add other device and select CD/DVD Drive from the drop-
down menu.
Option Description
5 If you do not want the CD-ROM drive to connect when the virtual machine starts, deselect Connect
at power on.
6 Select the virtual device node that the drive uses in the virtual machine.
7 Click Save.
ESXi does not support floppy drives that are backed up by a physical floppy drive on the host.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device privilege on the
virtual machine.
Procedure
VMware, Inc. 71
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add other device and select Floppy Drive from the drop-down
menu.
4 Expand Floppy drive and select the type of device you want to use.
Option Description
Client Device Select this option to connect the floppy device to a physical floppy device or
a .flp floppy image on the system from which you access the
VMware Host Client.
Use existing floppy image a Select this option to connect the virtual device to an existing image of a floppy
drive on a datastore accessible to the host.
b Click Browse and select the floppy image.
5 (Optional) Select Connect at power on to configure the device to connect when the virtual machine
powers on.
6 Click Save.
Prerequisites
n Familiarize yourself with the different media types that the port can access, vSPC connections, and
any conditions that might apply. See vSphere Virtual Machine Administration.
n To connect a serial port over a network, add a Firewall rule set. See vSphere Virtual Machine
Administration.
Procedure
VMware, Inc. 72
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add other device and select Serial Port.
4 In the hardware list, expand the serial port and select the type of media port to access.
Option Description
Use output file Browse to the location of the file on the host to store the output of the virtual serial
port.
Use physical serial port Select the port from the drop-down menu.
Use named pipe a Type a name for the pipe in the Pipe name field
b Select the Near End and Far End of the pipe from the drop-down menus.
Use network a From the Direction drop-down menu, select Server or Client.
b Type the port URI.
The URI is the remote end of the serial port to which the serial port of the
virtual machine should connect.
c If vSPC is used as an intermediate step to access all virtual machines
through a single IP address, select Use Virtual Serial Port Concentrator
and enter the vSPC URI location.
5 (Optional) Deselect Connect at power on if you do not want the parallel port device to connect when
the virtual machine powers on.
6 Click Save.
If you do not use vSPC and you configure your virtual machine with a serial port connected as a server
with a telnet://:12345 URI, you can connect to your virtual machine's serial port from your Linux or
Windows operating system.
Similarly, if you run the Telnet Server on your Linux system on port 23 (telnet://yourLinuxBox:23),
you configure the virtual machine as a client URI.
telnet://yourLinuxBox:23
The virtual machine initiates the connection to your Linux system on port 23.
VMware, Inc. 73
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Note To add a parallel port to a virtual machine that runs on an ESXi 4.1 or earlier host, you can also
select to send output to a physical parallel port on the host. This option is not available with ESXi 5.0 and
later host versions.
Prerequisites
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device privilege on the
virtual machine.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, select Add other device and select Parallel Port.
4 Expand the parallel port and in the Connection field, browse to a folder to create the file in.
5 (Optional) Select Connect at power on to configure the device to connect when the virtual machine
powers on.
6 Click Save.
To display a virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory, power on the virtual machine.
Procedure
u To access the virtual machines that are available on the host that you are logged in to, click Virtual
Machines in the VMware Host Client inventory.
VMware, Inc. 74
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
You can now edit the virtual machine settings and perform different administrative and troubleshooting
tasks on the virtual machines in the list.
Procedure
2 Click Columns and select the information that you want to display or hide in the virtual machine
panel.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click the virtual machine from the list and select Unregister.
3 To confirm that you want to remove the virtual machine from the inventory, click Yes.
The host removes the virtual machine from the inventory and no longer tracks its condition.
Prerequisites
n Verify that the virtual machine does not share the disk with another virtual machine. If two virtual
machines are sharing the same disk, the disk files are not deleted.
VMware, Inc. 75
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
2 Right-click the virtual machine from the list and select Delete from the drop-down menu.
3 Click Delete.
Procedure
3 Select the virtual machine you want to register from the list and click Register.
You can take multiple snapshots of a virtual machine to create restoration positions in a linear process.
With multiple snapshots, you can save many positions to be able to perform many types of work
processes. Snapshots operate on individual virtual machines. Taking snapshots of multiple virtual
machines, for example, taking snapshots for all members of a team, requires that you take a separate
snapshot of each team member's virtual machine.
Snapshots are useful as a short term solution for testing software with unknown or potentially harmful
effects. For example, you can use a snapshot as a restoration point during a linear or iterative process,
such as installing update packages, or during a branching process, such as installing different versions of
a program. Using snapshots ensures that each installation begins from an identical baseline.
With snapshots, you can preserve a baseline before making changes to a virtual machine in the snapshot
tree.
Several operations for creating and managing virtual machine snapshots and snapshot trees are
available in the Snapshot Manager of the VMware Host Client. These operations enable you to create
snapshots, restore any snapshot in the snapshot hierarchy, delete snapshots, and more. You can create
extensive snapshot trees that you can use to save the state of a virtual machine at any specific time and
restore the virtual machine state later. Each branch in a snapshot tree can have up to 32 snapshots.
n Virtual machine settings. The virtual machine directory, which includes the disks added or changed
after you take the snapshot.
VMware, Inc. 76
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Power state. The virtual machine can be powered on, powered off, or suspended.
Parent Snapshots The first virtual machine snapshot that you create is the base parent
snapshot. The parent snapshot is the most recently saved version of the
current state of the virtual machine. Taking a snapshot creates a delta disk
file for each disk attached to the virtual machine and optionally, a memory
file. The delta disk files and memory file are stored with the base .vmdk file.
The parent snapshot is always the snapshot that appears immediately
above the You are here icon in the Snapshot Manager. If you revert or
restore a snapshot, that snapshot becomes the parent of the You are here
current state.
Note The parent snapshot is not always the snapshot that you took most
recently.
Child Snapshots A snapshot of a virtual machine taken after the parent snapshot. Each child
snapshot contains delta files for each attached virtual disk, and optionally a
memory file that points from the present state of the virtual disk (You are
here). Each child snapshot's delta files merge with each previous child
snapshot until reaching the parent disks. A child disk can later be a parent
disk for future child disks.
The relationship of parent and child snapshots can change if you have multiple branches in the snapshot
tree. A parent snapshot can have more than one child. Many snapshots have no children.
Important Do not manually manipulate individual child disks or any of the snapshot configuration files
because doing so can compromise the snapshot tree and result in data loss. This restriction includes disk
resizing and making modifications to the base parent disk by using vmkfstools.
VMware, Inc. 77
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Snapshot Behavior
Taking a snapshot preserves the disk state at a specific time by creating a series of delta disks for each
attached virtual disk or virtual RDM and optionally preserves the memory and power state by creating a
memory file. Taking a snapshot creates a snapshot object in the Snapshot Manager that represents the
virtual machine state and settings.
Each snapshot creates an additional delta .vmdk disk file. When you take a snapshot, the snapshot
mechanism prevents the guest operating system from writing to the base .vmdk file and instead directs all
writes to the delta disk file. The delta disk represents the difference between the current state of the
virtual disk and the state that existed at the time that you took the previous snapshot. If more than one
snapshot exists, delta disks can represent the difference between each snapshot. Delta disk files can
expand quickly and become as large as the entire virtual disk if the guest operating system writes to
every block of the virtual disk.
Snapshot Files
When you take a snapshot, you capture the state of the virtual machine settings and the virtual disk. If
you are taking a memory snapshot, you also capture the memory state of the virtual machine. These
states are saved to files that reside with the virtual machine's base files.
Snapshot Files
A snapshot consists of files that are stored on a supported storage device. A Take Snapshot operation
creates .vmdk, -delta.vmdk, .vmsd, and .vmsn files. By default, the first and all delta disks are stored
with the base .vmdk file. The .vmsd and .vmsn files are stored in the virtual machine directory.
Delta disk files A .vmdk file to which the guest operating system can write. The delta disk
represents the difference between the current state of the virtual disk and
the state that existed at the time that the previous snapshot was taken.
When you take a snapshot, the state of the virtual disk is preserved, the
guest operating system stops writing to it, and a delta or child disk is
created.
A delta disk has two files. One is a small descriptor file that contains
information about the virtual disk, such as geometry and child-parent
relationship information. The other one is a corresponding file that contains
the raw data.
The files that make up the delta disk are called child disks or redo logs.
Flat file A -flat.vmdk file that is one of two files that comprises the base disk. The
flat disk contains the raw data for the base disk. This file does not appear
as a separate file in the Datastore Browser.
VMware, Inc. 78
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Database file A .vmsd file that contains the virtual machine's snapshot information and is
the primary source of information for the Snapshot Manager. This file
contains line entries, which define the relationships between snapshots and
between child disks for each snapshot.
Memory file A .vmsn file that includes the active state of the virtual machine. Capturing
the memory state of the virtual machine lets you revert to a turned on virtual
machine state. With nonmemory snapshots, you can only revert to a turned
off virtual machine state. Memory snapshots take longer to create than
nonmemory snapshots. The time the ESXi host takes to write the memory
onto the disk depends on the amount of memory the virtual machine is
configured to use.
A Take Snapshot operation creates .vmdk, -delta.vmdk, vmsd, and vmsn files.
File Description
vmname-number.vmdk and vmname- Snapshot file that represents the difference between the current state of the virtual disk
number-delta.vmdk and the state that existed at the time the previous snapshot was taken.
The filename uses the following syntax, S1vm-000001.vmdk where S1vm is the name of
the virtual machine and the six-digit number, 000001, is based on the files that already
exist in the directory. The number does not consider the number of disks that are
attached to the virtual machine.
vmname.vmsd Database of the virtual machine's snapshot information and the primary source of
information for the Snapshot Manager.
vmname.Snapshotnumber.vmsn Memory state of the virtual machine at the time you take the snapshot. The filename
uses the following syntax, S1vm.snapshot1.vmsn, where S1vm is the virtual machine
name, and snapshot1 is the first snapshot.
Note A .vmsn file is created each time you take a snapshot, regardless of the memory
selection. A .vmsn file without memory is much smaller than one with memory.
Snapshot Limitations
Snapshots can affect virtual machine performance and do not support some disk types or virtual
machines configured with bus sharing. Snapshots are useful as short-term solutions for capturing point-
in-time virtual machine states and are not appropriate for long-term virtual machine backups.
n VMware does not support snapshots of raw disks, RDM physical mode disks, or guest operating
systems that use an iSCSI initiator in the guest.
n Virtual machines with independent disks must be powered off before you take a snapshot. Snapshots
of powered-on or suspended virtual machines with independent disks are not supported.
n Snapshots are not supported with PCI vSphere Direct Path I/O devices.
n VMware does not support snapshots of virtual machines configured for bus sharing. If you require bus
sharing, consider running backup software in your guest operating system as an alternative solution.
If your virtual machine currently has snapshots that prevent you from configuring bus sharing, delete
(consolidate) the snapshots.
VMware, Inc. 79
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Snapshots provide a point-in-time image of the disk that backup solutions can use, but Snapshots are
not meant to be a robust method of backup and recovery. If the files containing a virtual machine are
lost, its snapshot files are also lost. Also, large numbers of snapshots are difficult to manage,
consume large amounts of disk space, and are not protected in the case of hardware failure.
n Snapshots can negatively affect the performance of a virtual machine. Performance degradation is
based on how long the snapshot or snapshot tree is in place, the depth of the tree, and how much the
virtual machine and its guest operating system have changed from the time you took the snapshot.
Also, you might see a delay in the amount of time it takes the virtual machine to power-on. Do not run
production virtual machines from snapshots on a permanent basis.
n If a virtual machine has virtual hard disks larger than 2TBs, snapshot operations can take significantly
longer to finish.
When you take a snapshot, other activity that is occurring in the virtual machine might affect the snapshot
process when you revert to that snapshot. The best time to take a snapshot from a storage perspective, is
when you are not incurring a large I/O load. The best time to take a snapshot from a service perspective
is when no applications in the virtual machine are communicating with other computers. The potential for
problems is greatest if the virtual machine is communicating with another computer, especially in a
production environment. For example, if you take a snapshot while the virtual machine is downloading a
file from a server on the network, the virtual machine continues downloading the file and communicating
its progress to the server. If you revert to the snapshot, communications between the virtual machine and
the server are confused and the file transfer fails. Depending on the task that you are performing, you can
create a memory snapshot or you can quiesce the file system in the virtual machine.
Memory Snapshots The default selection for taking snapshots. When you capture the virtual
machine's memory state, the snapshot retains the live state of the virtual
machine. Memory snapshots create a snapshot at a precise time, for
example, to upgrade software that is still working. If you take a memory
snapshot and the upgrade does not complete as expected, or the software
does not meet your expectations, you can revert the virtual machine to its
previous state.
VMware, Inc. 80
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
When you capture the memory state, the virtual machine's files do not
require quiescing. If you do not capture the memory state, the snapshot
does not save the live state of the virtual machine and the disks are crash
consistent unless you quiesce them.
Quiesced Snapshots When you quiesce a virtual machine, VMware Tools quiesces the file
system of the virtual machine. A quiesce operation ensures that a snapshot
disk represents a consistent state of the guest file systems. Quiesced
snapshots are appropriate for automated or periodic backups. For example,
if you are unaware of the virtual machine's activity, but want several recent
backups to revert to, you can quiesce the files.
If the virtual machine is powered off or VMware Tools is not available, the
Quiesce parameter is not available. You cannot quiesce virtual machines
that have large capacity disks.
Important Do not use snapshots as your only backup solution or as a long-term backup solution.
When you create a memory snapshot, the snapshot captures the state of the virtual machine's memory
and the virtual machine power settings. When you capture the virtual machine's memory state, snapshots
that capture the memory state of a virtual machine take longer to complete. You might also see a
momentary lapse in response over the network.
When you quiesce a virtual machine, VMware Tools quiesces the file system in the virtual machine. The
quiesce operation pauses or alters the state of running processes on the virtual machine, especially
processes that might modify information stores on the disk during a restore operation.
Application-consistent quiescing is not supported for virtual machines with IDE or SATA disks.
Note If you take a snapshot of a Dynamic Disk (Microsoft-specific disk type), the snapshot technology
preserves the quiesced state of the file system, but does not preserve the quiesced state of the
application.
Prerequisites
n If you are taking a memory snapshot of a virtual machine that has multiple disks in different disk
modes, verify that the virtual machine is powered off. For example, if you have a special purpose
configuration that requires you to use an independent disk, you must power off the virtual machine
before taking a snapshot.
n To capture the memory state of the virtual machine, verify that the virtual machine is powered on.
VMware, Inc. 81
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n To quiesce the virtual machine files, verify that the virtual machine is powered on and that VMware
Tools is installed.
n Verify that you have the Virtual machine .Snapshot management. Create snapshot privilege on
the virtual machine.
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine from the list and select Snapshots > Take snapshot.
5 (Optional) Select the Snapshot the virtual machine's memory check box to capture the memory of
the virtual machine.
6 (Optional) Deselect Snapshot the virtual machine's memory and select Quiesce guest file
system (needs VMware Tools installed) check box to pause running processes on the guest
operating system so that file system contents are in a known consistent state when you take the
snapshot.
Quiesce the virtual machine files only when the virtual machine is powered on and you do not want to
capture the virtual machine's memory.
Restoring Snapshots
To return a virtual machine to its original state, or to return to another snapshot in the snapshot hierarchy,
you can restore a snapshot.
When you restore a snapshot, you return the virtual machine's memory, settings, and the state of the
virtual machine disks to the state they were in at the time you took the snapshot. If you want the virtual
machine to be suspended, powered on, or powered off when you start it, make sure that it is in the correct
state when you take the snapshot.
Revert to Latest Restores the parent snapshot, one level up in the hierarchy from the You
Snapshot are Here position. Revert to Latest Snapshot activates the parent
snapshot of the current state of the virtual machine.
Revert To Lets you restore any snapshot in the snapshot tree and makes that
snapshot the parent snapshot of the current state of the virtual machine.
Subsequent snapshots from this point create a new branch of the snapshot
tree.
n The current disk and memory states are discarded, and the virtual machine reverts to the disk and
memory states of the parent snapshot.
VMware, Inc. 82
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Existing snapshots are not removed. You can restore those snapshots at any time.
n If the snapshot includes the memory state, the virtual machine will be in the same power state as
when you created the snapshot.
Powered on (includes memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot, and the virtual machine is
powered on and running.
Powered on (does not include memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot and the virtual machine is
powered off.
Powered off (does not include memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot and the virtual machine is
powered off.
Virtual machines running certain kinds of workloads can take several minutes to resume responsiveness
after reverting from a snapshot.
Note vApp metadata for virtual machines in vApps does not follow the snapshot semantics for virtual
machine configuration. vApp properties that are deleted, modified, or defined after a snapshot is taken
remain intact (deleted, modified, or defined) after the virtual machine reverts to that snapshot or any
previous snapshots.
Prerequisites
Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Snapshot management.Revert to snapshot privilege on the
virtual machine.
Procedure
2 Right-click the virtual machine in the list and select Snapshots > Restore snapshot.
Note The current state of the virtual machine will be lost unless you save it in a snapshot.
3 Click Restore to revert the virtual machine to the most recent snapshot.
Deleting Snapshots
Deleting a snapshot removes the snapshot from the Snapshot Manager. The snapshot files are
consolidated and written to the parent snapshot disk and merge with the virtual machine base disk.
Deleting a snapshot does not change the virtual machine or other snapshots. Deleting a snapshot
consolidates the changes between snapshots and previous disk states and writes all the data from the
delta disk that contains the information about the deleted snapshot to the parent disk. When you delete
the base parent snapshot, all changes merge with the base virtual machine disk.
VMware, Inc. 83
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
To delete a snapshot, a large amount of information needs to be read and written to a disk. This process
can reduce virtual machine performance until consolidation is complete. Consolidating snapshots
removes redundant disks, which improves virtual machine performance and saves storage space. The
time it takes to delete snapshots and consolidate the snapshot files depends on the amount of data that
the guest operating system writes to the virtual disks after you take the last snapshot. The required time is
proportional to the amount of data the virtual machine is writing during consolidation if the virtual machine
is powered on.
Failure of disk consolidation can reduce the performance of virtual machines. You can check whether any
virtual machines require separate consolidation operations by viewing a list. For information about
locating and viewing the consolidation state of multiple virtual machines and running a separate
consolidation operation, see vSphere Virtual Machine Administration.
Delete Use the Delete option to remove a single parent or child snapshot from the
snapshot tree. Delete writes disk changes that occur between the state of
the snapshot and the previous disk state to the parent snapshot.
Note Deleting a single snapshot preserves the current state of the virtual
machine and does not affect any other snapshot.
You can also use the Delete option to remove a corrupt snapshot and its
files from an abandoned branch of the snapshot tree without merging them
with the parent snapshot.
Delete All Use the Delete All option to delete all snapshots from the Snapshot
Manager. Delete all consolidates and writes the changes that occur
between snapshots and the previous delta disk states to the base parent
disk and merges them with the base virtual machine disk.
To prevent snapshot files from merging with the parent snapshot if, for example, an update or installation
fails, first use the Restore command to restore to a previous snapshot. This action invalidates the
snapshot delta disks and deletes the memory file. You can then use the Delete option to remove the
snapshot and any associated files.
Be careful not to accidentally delete a snapshot that you need. You cannot restore a deleted snapshot.
For example, you might want to install several browsers, a, b, and c, and capture the virtual machine
state after you install each browser. The first, or base snapshot, captures the virtual machine with browser
a and the second snapshot captures browser b. If you restore the base snapshot that includes browser a
and take a third snapshot to capture browser c and delete the snapshot that contains browser b, you
cannot return to the virtual machine state that includes browser b.
Procedure
2 Right-click the virtual machine in the list and select Snapshots > Manage Snapshots.
VMware, Inc. 84
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
3 Click the snapshot that you want to delete and click Delete snapshot.
4 (Optional) In the Delete Snapshot dialog box, select the Remove all children snapshots check-box
to delete the selected snapshot together with all its children snapshots.
After you take a snapshot, you can right-click a virtual machine and click Revert to snapshot to restore
the virtual machine to the state of the snapshot at any time.
If you have a series of snapshots, you can use the Snapshot Manager to restore any parent or child
snapshot. Subsequent child snapshots that you take from the restored snapshot create a branch in the
snapshot tree. Use the Snapshot Manager to delete a snapshot from the tree.
You are here icon The You are here icon represents the current and active state of the virtual machine.
The Restore, Delete, and Edit actions are disabled for the You are here state.
Details Shows the snapshot name and description, the date you created the snapshot. The Console shows the
power state of the virtual machine when a snapshot was taken. The Name, Description, and Created
text boxes are blank if you do not select a snapshot.
Procedure
3 Expand the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Monitor.
VMware, Inc. 85
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
4 Click Performance.
5 To view the virtual machine resource usage for the last hour, select an option from the drop-down
menu.
n To view the percentage of CPU that the virtual machine used during the last hour, select CPU
usage.
n To view the memory that the host consumed during the last hour, select Memory usage.
Prerequisites
Procedure
3 Expand the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Monitor.
4 Click Events.
6 (Optional) Use the filter controls above the list to filter the list.
Procedure
3 Expand the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Monitor.
4 Click Tasks.
6 (Optional) Use the filter controls above the list to filter the list.
VMware, Inc. 86
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Procedure
3 Expand the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Monitor.
4 Click Logs.
5 (Optional) Click Generate support bundle to consolidate all the logs for troubleshooting.
6 Right-click a log from the list and select Open in new window to view the log.
Procedure
3 Expand the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Monitor.
4 Click Notifications.
VMware, Inc. 87
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
The virtual TPM device is a software emulation of the TPM functionality. You can add a virtual TPM
(vTPM) device to the virtual machines in your environment. The vTPM implementation does not require a
physical TPM chip on the host.ESXi uses the vTPM device to exert the TPM functionality in your vSphere
environment.
vTPM is available to virtual machines that have Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016 operating
systems. The virtual machine must be of hardware version 14 or later.
You can add a virtual TPM device to a virtual machine only in the vCenter Server instance. For more
information, see the vSphere Security documentation.
In the VMware Host Client, you can only remove the virtual TPM device from a virtual machine.
Enabling VBS on a virtual machine automatically enables the virtual hardware that Windows requires for
the VBS feature. By enabling VBS, a variant of Hyper-V starts in the virtual machine and Windows starts
running inside the Hyper-V root partition.
VBS is available on the latest Windows OS versions, for example Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016.
To use VBS on a virtual machine, the virtual machine compatibility must be ESXi 6.7 and later.
In the VMware Host Client, you can enable VBS during virtual machine creation. Alternatively, you can
enable or disable VBS for an existing virtual machine.
Note You can enable VBS on a virtual machine only if the TPM validation of the host is successful.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the Virtual Hardware tab, find the TPM device and click the Remove icon.
VMware, Inc. 88
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click a virtual machine in the list and select Edit settings from the pop-up menu.
3 On the VM Options tab, enable or disable VBS for the virtual machine.
n Select the Enable Virtualization Based Security check box to enable VBS for the virtual
machine.
n Deselect the Enable Virtualization Based Security check box to disable VBS for the virtual
machine.
When you enable VBS, several options are automatically selected and become dimmed in the wizard.
VMware, Inc. 89
Managing Storage in the
VMware Host Client 4
When you connect to an ESXi host by using the VMware Host Client, you can perform different storage
management tasks on the ESXi host, including configuring adapters, creating datastores, and viewing
storage device information.
n Performing Storage Refresh and Rescan Operations in the VMware Host Client
Depending on the type of storage you use, datastores can be of the following types:
You can increase datastore capacity after you create a datastore but only if it is a VMFS datastore.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
2 To view the details for a specific datastore, select the datastore from the list.
VMware, Inc. 90
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Install and configure any adapters that your storage requires. Rescan the adapters to discover newly
added storage devices.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
3 On the Select creation type page, select Create new VMFS datastore and click Next.
Option Description
Create new VMFS datastore Creates a new VMFS datastore on a local disk device.
Add an extent to existing VMFS Increases the size of an existing datastore by adding a new extent on another
datastore disk.
Expand an existing VMFS datastore Increases the size of an existing datastore extent.
extent
Mount NFS datastore Creates a new datastore by mounting a remote NFS volume.
4 On the Select device page, select where to create the new VMFS partition.
The list contains only devices that have enough available space.
c Click Next.
5 On the Select partitioning options page, select how to partition the device and click Next.
Option Description
Use Full Disk It shows you all the free space that is available on the device.
Custom Click the Free space bar and use the horizontal scroller to partition the device.
6 On the Ready to complete page, review the configuration details and click Finish.
VMware, Inc. 91
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
n Dynamically grow any expandable datastore extent, so that it fills the available adjacent capacity. The
extent is considered expandable when the underlying storage device has free space immediately
after the extent.
n Dynamically add the extent. The datastore can span over up to 32 extents with the size of each
extent of more than 2 TB, yet appear as a single volume. The spanned VMFS datastore can use any
or all its extents at any time. It does not need to fill up a particular extent before using the next one.
Note Datastores that support only the hardware assisted locking, also called the atomic test and set
(ATS) mechanism, cannot span over non-ATS devices. For more information, see vSphere Storage.
If a shared datastore has powered on virtual machines and becomes 100% full, you can increase the
datastore's capacity only from the host that the powered on virtual machines are registered on.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
3 On the Select creation type page, click Add an extent to existing VMFS datastore and click Next.
4 On the Select datastore page, select the datastore to expand and click Next.
5 On the Select device page, select a device to create the new VMFS partition on and click Next.
6 On the Select partitioning options page, select how to partition the device and click Next.
Option Description
Use Full Disk It shows you all the free space that is available on the device.
Custom Click the Free space bar and use the horizontal scroller to partition the device.
7 On the Ready to complete page, review the configuration details and click Finish.
The ESXi host can mount an NFS volume and use it for its storage needs.
VMware, Inc. 92
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Typically, the NFS volume or directory is created by a storage administrator and is exported from the NFS
server. You do not need to format the NFS volume with a local file system, such as VMFS. Instead, you
mount the volume directly on the ESXi hosts and use it to store and boot virtual machines in the same
way that you use the VMFS datastores.
In addition to storing virtual disks on NFS datastores, you can use NFS as a central repository for ISO
images, virtual machine templates, and so on. If you use the datastore for the ISO images, you can
connect the CD-ROM device of the virtual machine to an ISO file on the datastore. You then can install a
guest operating system from the ISO file.
When you use NFS storage, follow the specific guidelines related to NFS server configuration,
networking, NFS datastores, and so on.
Prerequisites
Because NFS requires network connectivity to access data on remote servers, before configuring NFS,
you must first configure VMkernel networking.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
3 On the Select creation type page, click Mount NFS datastore and click Next.
4 On the Provide NFS mount details page, provide the details for the NFS you mount.
For the server name, you can enter an IP address, a DNS name, or an NFS UUID.
Note When you mount the same NFS volume on different hosts, make sure that the server and
folder names are identical across the hosts. If the names do not match, the hosts detect the same
NFS volume as two different datastores. This might result in a failure of features such as vMotion.
An example of such discrepancy is if you enter filer as the server name on one host and
filer.domain.com on the other.
e Click Next.
VMware, Inc. 93
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
5 On the Ready to complete page, review the configuration settings for the NFS datastore and click
Finish.
Do not perform any configuration operations that might result in I/O to the datastore while the unmount is
in progress.
Prerequisites
Note Make sure that the datastore is not used by vSphere HA heartbeating. vSphere HA heartbeating
does not prevent you from unmouting the datastore. However, if the datastore is used for heartbeating,
unmounting it might cause the host to fail and restart all active virtual machines.
Before unmounting a datastore, also make sure that the following prerequisites are met:
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
2 Right-click the datastore to unmount from the list and click Unmount.
Problem
The operation to unmount or remove a datastore fails if the datastore has any opened files. For these
user operations, the vSphere HA agent closes all the files that it has opened, for example, heartbeat files.
If the agent is not reachable by vCenter Server or the agent cannot flush out pending I/Os to close the
files, a The HA agent on host '{hostName}' failed to quiesce file activity on datastore
'{dsName} fault is triggered.
VMware, Inc. 94
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Cause
If the datastore to be unmounted or removed is used for heartbeating, vCenter Server excludes it from
heartbeating and chooses a new one. However, the agent does not receive the updated heartbeat
datastores if it is not reachable, that is, if the host is isolated or in a network partition. In such cases,
heartbeat files are not closed and the user operation fails. The operation can also fail if the datastore is
not accessible because of storage failures such as all paths down.
Note When you remove a VMFS datastore, the datastore is removed from all the hosts in inventory. So
if there are any hosts in a vSphere HA cluster that are unreachable or that cannot access the datastore,
the operation fails.
Solution
Ensure that the datastore is accessible and the affected hosts are reachable.
Note Virtual Volumes do not support uploading files directly to the virtual datastores. You must first
create a folder on the virtual datastore, and then upload the files into the folder.
In addition to their traditional use as a storage for virtual machine files, datastores can serve to store data
or files related to virtual machines. For example, you can upload ISO images of operating systems from a
local computer to a datastore on the host. You then use these images to install guest operating systems
on the new virtual machines.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
3 Select the datastore that you want to store the file on.
4 (Optional) Click Create directory to create a new datastore directory to store the file.
VMware, Inc. 95
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
6 Locate the item that you want to upload from your local computer and click Open.
7 (Optional) Refresh the datastore file browser to see the uploaded file on the list.
Download Files from a Datastore to Your System in the VMware Host Client
Use the datastore file browser to download files from the datastores available on the host that you are
managing to your local system.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
4 Click the folder that contains the file that you want to download.
6 Click Download.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
4 Select the folder that contains the file that you want to delete.
5 Click the file that you want to remove from the datastore, click Delete, and click Delete again.
VMware, Inc. 96
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Note Virtual disk files are moved and copied without format conversion. If you move a virtual disk to a
datastore on a type of host that is different from the type of the source host, you might need to convert the
virtual disks before you can use them.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
4 Select the file or folder that you want to move to another location and click Move.
Note Virtual disk files are moved and copied without format conversion. If you move a virtual disk to a
datastore on a type of host that is different from the type of the source host, you might need to convert the
virtual disks.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
4 Select the file or folder that you want to move to another location and click Copy.
VMware, Inc. 97
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
Note If the host is managed by vCenter Server, you cannot rename the datastore from the
VMware Host Client. You can only perform the task from the vCenter Server instance that manages the
host.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
2 Right-click a datastore in the list and select Rename from the drop-down menu.
3 Enter a new name for the datastore and click Save to apply your changes.
4 (Optional) Click Refresh to see the new name of the datastore in the list of available datastores.
Note The datastore delete operation permanently deletes all files associated with virtual machines on
the datastore. Although you can delete the datastore without unmounting, it is preferable that you
unmount the datastore first
VMware, Inc. 98
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Datastores.
2 Right-click the datastore from the list and select Delete from the drop-down menu.
Block storage devices, Fibre Channel and iSCSI, and NAS devices support the hardware acceleration.
For additional details, see the VMware knowledge base article at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1021976.
Changing advanced settings is considered unsupported unless VMware Technical Support instructs you
to do so.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 Right-click the virtual machine in the list and select Edit Settings from the drop-down menu.
5 Click Save.
VMware, Inc. 99
vSphere Single Host Management - VMware Host Client
Thin provisioning is a method that optimizes storage utilization by allocating storage space in a flexible
on-demand manner. Thin provisioning contrasts with the traditional model, called thick provisioning. With
thick provisioning, a large amount of storage space is provided in advance in anticipation of future storage
needs. However, the space might remain unused causing underutilization of storage capacity.
The VMware thin provisioning features help you eliminate storage underutilization problems at the
datastore and storage array level.
The following procedure assumes that you are creating a new virtual machine. For more information, see
Creating a Virtual Machine in the VMware Host Client.
Procedure
1 Right-click Host in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Create/Register VM.
2 Select a method for adding a new virtual machine on the host and click Next.
4 Select the virtual machine compatibility from the Compatibility drop-down menu.
5 Select a guest operating system version from the Guest OS version drop-down menu and click
Next.
6 From the list of accessible datastores on the Select storage page of the New Virtual Machine wizard,
select the destination datastore for the virtual machine configuration files and all of the virtual disks.
8 Under Disk Provisioning, select the Thin provisioned radio button and click Next.
9 On the Ready to complete page of the New Virtual Machine wizard, review the configuration settings
for the virtual machine and click Finish to save your settings.
Resource Consumption shows how much datastore space is occupied by virtual machine files, including
configuration files, log files, snapshots, virtual disks, and so on. When the virtual machine is running, the
used storage space also includes swap files.
For virtual machines with thin disks, the actual storage usage value might be less than the size of the
virtual disk.
Procedure
2 Review the Resource Consumption information in the lower right area of the virtual machine summary
page.
Procedure
1 Right-click the virtual machine in the VMware Host Client inventory and select Edit settings.
The Type text box shows the format of your virtual disk.
When you enable iSCSI on the host that you are managing in your VMware Host Client environment, you
can configure and add new network port bindings, static and dynamic targets, you can manage CHAP
authentication, and configure various advanced settings on your host storage.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Adapters.
All storage adapters available to the host are listed under Adapters.
2 To view details for a specific adapter, select the adapter from the list.
Note Before you can use the software iSCSI adapter, you must set up networking, activate the adapter,
and configure parameters such as CHAP.
n Enabling iSCSI on your host. SeeEnable iSCSI for an ESXi Host in the VMware Host Client
n Adding a port binding. See Add Port Binding in the VMware Host Client
n Removing port binding. See Remove Port Binding in the VMware Host Client
Configuring the network connection involves creating a virtual VMkernel adapter for each physical
network adapter. You use 1:1 mapping between each virtual and physical network adapter. You then
associate the VMkernel adapter with an appropriate iSCSI or iSER adapter. This process is called port
binding.
Host
vSwitch
vmnic
physical NIC
IP network
n You can connect the software iSCSI adapter with any physical NICs available on your host.
n The dependent iSCSI adapters must be connected only to their own physical NICs.
n You must connect the iSER adapter only to the RDMA-capable network adapter.
For specific considerations on when and how to use network connections with software iSCSI, see the
VMware knowledge base article at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2038869.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
3 (Optional) Configure the parameters and components that you want to change.
You can bind the software iSCSI initiator on the ESXi host to a single or multiple VMkernel ports, so that
iSCSI traffic flows only through the bound ports. When port binding is configured, the iSCSI initiator
creates iSCSI sessions from all bound ports to all configured target portals.
Note Make sure that all target portals are reachable from all VMkernel ports when port binding is used.
Otherwise, iSCSI sessions might fail to create. As a result, the rescan operation might take longer than
expected.
No Port Binding
If you do not use port binding, the ESXi networking layer selects the best VMkernel port based on its
routing table. The host uses the port to create an iSCSI session with the target portal. Without the port
binding, only one session per each target portal is created.
Example 1. Multiple paths for an iSCSI target with a single network portal
If your target has only one network portal, you can create multiple paths to the target by adding multiple
VMkernel ports on your ESXi host and binding them to the iSCSI initiator.
vmk1
192.168.0.1/24
vmnic1
Same subnet
vmk2
192.168.0.2/24
vmnic2 Single Target:
IP 192.168.0.10/24
vmk3 Network
192.168.0.3/24
vmnic3
vmk2
192.168.0.4/24
vmnic4
In this example, all initiator ports and the target portal are configured in the same subnet. The target is
reachable through all bound ports. You have four VMkernel ports and one target portal, so total of four
paths are created.
You can create multiple paths by configuring multiple ports and target portals on different IP subnets. By
keeping initiator and target ports in different subnets, you can force ESXi to create paths through specific
ports. In this configuration, you do not use port binding because port binding requires that all initiator and
target ports are on the same subnet.
vmk1 SP/Controller A:
IP
Network
vmk2 SP/Controller B:
ESXi selects vmk1 when connecting to Port 0 of Controller A and Controller B because all three ports are
on the same subnet. Similarly, vmk2 is selected when connecting to Port 1of Controller A and B. You can
use NIC teaming in this configuration.
Paths Description
You can use the esxcli command to add static routes for your iSCSI traffic. After you configure static
routes, initiator and target ports in different subnets can communicate with each other.
In this example, you keep all bound vmkernel ports in one subnet (N1) and configure all target portals in
another subnet (N2). You can then add a static route for the target subnet (N2).
N1 N2
vmk1
SP/Controller A
192.168.1.1/24 Port 0
10.115.179.1/24
vmnic1
IP
Network
vmk2
SP/Controller B
192.168.1.2/24 Port 0
10.115.179.2/24
vmnic2
In this configuration, you use static routing when using different subnets. You cannot use the port binding
with this configuration.
vmk1
SP/Controller A
192.168.1.1/24 Port 0
0.115.155.1/24
vmnic1
IP
Network
vmk2
SP/Controller A
192.168.2.1/24 Port 0
0.115.179.1/24
vmnic2
You configure vmk1 and vmk2 in separate subnets, 192.168.1.0 and 192.168.2.0. Your target portals are
also in separate subnets, 10.115.155.0 and 10.155.179.0.
You can add the static route for 10.115.155.0 from vmk1. Make sure that the gateway is reachable from
vmk1.
You then add static route for 10.115.179.0 from vmk2. Make sure that the gateway is reachable from
vmk2.
Starting with vSphere 6.5, you can configure a separate gateway per VMkernel port. If you use DHCP to
obtain IP configuration for a VMkernel port, gateway information can also be obtained using DHCP.
To see gateway information per VMkernel port, use the following command:
Name IPv4 Address IPv4 Netmask IPv4 Broadcast Address Type Gateway DHCP DNS
---- -------------- ------------- -------------- ------------ -------------- --------
vmk0 10.115.155.122 255.255.252.0 10.115.155.255 DHCP 10.115.155.253 true
vmk1 10.115.179.209 255.255.252.0 10.115.179.255 DHCP 10.115.179.253 true
vmk2 10.115.179.146 255.255.252.0 10.115.179.255 DHCP 10.115.179.253 true
With separate gateways per VMkernel port, you use port binding to reach targets in different subnets.
Prerequisites
n Create a virtual VMkernel adapter for each physical network adapter on your host. If you use multiple
VMkernel adapters, set up the correct network policy.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
Note Make sure that the network policy for the VMkernel adapter is compliant with the binding
requirements.
You can bind the software iSCSI adapter to one or more VMkernel adapters. For a dependent
hardware iSCSI adapter, only one VMkernel adapter associated with the correct physical NIC is
available.
4 Click Select.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
2 In the Network port bindings section, select a VMkernel NIC from the list.
Dynamic Discovery Also known as SendTargets discovery. Each time the initiator contacts a
specified iSCSI server, the initiator sends the SendTargets request to the
server. The server responds by supplying a list of available targets to the
initiator. The names and IP addresses of these targets appear on the Static
Discovery tab. If you remove a static target added by dynamic discovery,
the target might be returned to the list the next time a rescan happens, the
iSCSI adapter is reset, or the host is rebooted.
Note With software and dependent hardware iSCSI, ESXi filters target
addresses based on the IP family of the iSCSI server address specified. If
the address is IPv4, IPv6 addresses that might come in the SendTargets
response from the iSCSI server are filtered out. When DNS names are
used to specify an iSCSI server, or when the SendTargets response from
the iSCSI server has DNS names, ESXi relies on the IP family of the first
resolved entry from DNS lookup.
Static Discovery In addition to the dynamic discovery method, you can use static discovery
and manually enter information for the targets. The iSCSI adapter uses a
list of targets that you provide to contact and communicate with the iSCSI
servers.
When you set up Static Discovery, you can only add new iSCSI targets. You cannot change the IP
address, DNS name, iSCSI target name, or port number of an existing target. To make changes, remove
the existing target and add a new one.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
3 To add a name for the new static target, click the target in the list and enter the name.
4 To add an address for the new static target, click the target in the list and type the address.
5 (Optional) To change the port number of the new static target, click the target Port text box and type
the new port number.
6 (Optional) To edit the static target settings, select the new target from the list of available targets, click
Edit settings, configure the parameters that you want to change, and click Save.
7 (Optional) To delete a specific target, select the target and click Remove static target.
When you set up Dynamic Discovery, you can only add a new iSCSI system. You cannot change the IP
address, DNS name, or port number of an existing iSCSI system. To modify the parameters, delete the
existing system and add a new one.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
3 To add an address for the new dynamic target, click the target in the list and enter the address .
4 (Optional) To change the port number of the new dynamic target, click the target Port text box and
enter the new port number.
5 (Optional) To edit the dynamic target settings, select the new target from the list of available targets,
click Edit settings, configure the parameters that you want to change, and click Save.
6 (Optional) To delete a specific target, select the target and click Remove dynamic target.
Caution Do not change the advanced iSCSI settings unless you are working with the VMware support
team or otherwise have thorough information about the values to provide for the settings modification.
Prerequisites
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
3 Edit the parameters that you want to change and click Save configuration.
Set Up CHAP Authentication for an iSCSI Adapter in the VMware Host Client
You can set up all targets to receive the same CHAP name and secret from the iSCSI initiator at the
initiator level. By default, all discovery addresses or static targets inherit the CHAP parameters that you
set up at the initiator level.
The CHAP name must be fewer than 511 alphanumeric characters and the CHAP secret must be fewer
than 255 alphanumeric characters. Some adapters, for example the QLogic adapter, might have lower
limits, 255 for the CHAP name and 100 for the CHAP secret.
Prerequisites
n Before you set up CHAP parameters for software or dependent hardware iSCSI, determine whether
to configure one-way, also known as normal, or mutual CHAP. Independent hardware iSCSI adapters
do not support mutual CHAP.
n In one-way CHAP, the target authenticates the initiator.
n In mutual CHAP, both the target and the initiator authenticate each other. Use different secrets for
CHAP and mutual CHAP.
When you configure CHAP parameters, verify that they match the parameters on the storage side.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory, click Adapters, and click Configure iSCSI.
Make sure that the name you enter matches the name configured on the storage side.
c Enter a one-way CHAP secret to use for authentication. Use the same secret that you enter on
the storage side.
3 To configure mutual CHAP, select Use CHAP as an option for one-way CHAP. Expand Mutual CHAP
authentication to display all parameters.
Use different secrets for the one-way CHAP and the mutual CHAP.
If you change the authentication settings for an iSCSI adapter, you only use the updated credentials for
new iSCSI sessions. Existing sessions persist until either the connection is lost due to some outside
factor, such as force re-authentication, or you remove and add the adapter iSCSI targets.
The Storage Devices view allows you to list the host storage devices, analyze their information, and
modify properties.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Devices.
All storage devices available to the host are listed under Devices.
2 To view details for a specific device, select the device from the list.
Prerequisites
Verify that the device is not in use by ESXi as boot disk, VMFS datastore, or vSAN.
Procedure
2 Right-click a device from the list, click Clear partition table and click Yes.
Prerequisites
Verify that the device is not in use by ESXi as boot disk, VMFS datastore, or vSAN.
Procedure
Each host can have only one local PMem datastore that pools and represents all PMem resources of the
host.
Persistent memory combines the properties of both memory and storage. So, virtual machines can
consume the PMem resources of the ESXi host as memory (through virtual NVDIMM devices) or as
storage (through virtual PMem hard disks).
The host-local PMem datastore stores all direct-accessed NVDIMM devices and virtual PMem hard disks.
Virtual machines use virtual non-volatile dual in-line memory modules (NVDIMMs) for direct access to
PMem. The NVDIMM is a memory device that sits on an ordinary memory channel, but contains non-
volatile memory. In vSphere 6.7, the virtual NVDIMM is a new type of device that represents the physical
PMem regions of the host. A single virtual machine can have up to 64 virtual NVDIMM devices. Each
NVDIMM device is stored on the host-local PMem datastore.
Note To add an NVDIMM device to a virtual machine, the virtual machine must be of hardware version
14 and the guest OS must support persistent memory. If the guest OS is not PMem-aware, you can still
use PMem, but you cannot add an NVDIMM device to the virtual machine.
You must add a virtual PMem hard disk to the virtual machine. A virtual PMem hard disk is a traditional
SCSI disk to which the PMem Storage Policy is applied. The policy automatically places the hard disk on
the host-local PMem datastore.
In this mode of usage, there are no requirements for the hardware version of the virtual machine and the
guest OS.
Note If the guest OS is not PMem-aware, virtual machines can use PMem only through vPMemDisks.
The following graphic illustrates how the persistent memory components interact.
PMem-aware VM Traditional VM
PMem Storage
Policy
PMem Datastore
Persistent Memory
For information about how to configure and manage VMs with NVDIMMs or virtual persistent memory
disks, see the vSphere Resource Management documentation.
Modules In the VMware Host Client user interface, modules represent the physical
NVDIMMs that are connected to the motherboard of the host.
In the VMware Host Client, you can check the health status of each module
and identify unhealthy NVDIMM modules.
Interleave Sets Interleave sets are logical groupings of one or multiple modules. Interleave
sets reveal how information is spread across the physical DIMMs and how
ESXi reads the information from the modules. Because ESXi reads from
each interleave set in turns, interleave sets ensure higher memory
throughput.
You cannot perform most of the traditional datastore management tasks on the host-local PMem
datastore. However, you can use the information about modules, interleave sets, and namespaces for
troubleshooting purposes.
Prerequisites
Procedure
2 On the Persistent Memory tab, view information about the host-local PMem datastore.
n Click Modules to view information about the NVDIMMs that make up the PMem datastore.
n Click Interleave sets to see how the modules, or physical NVDIMMs, are grouped into interleave
sets.
Prerequisites
n Back up the content of the namespace if you might need that content at a later time.
Procedure
3 (Optional) In the list of namespaces, check the State column to determine which namespaces ESXi
currently uses.
Important Deleting a namespace frees up space on the datastore, but you can use the free space
only after you reboot the host.
The selected namespace is deleted from the PMem datastore. ESXi automatically creates a new
namespace that the PMem datastore can use. The new namespace has the same capacity, type, and
location ID as the deleted one.
Procedure
2 Click Datastores.
6 (Optional) Click vSAN to view the configuration parameters of the vSAN environment of your host.
7 (Optional) Click Hosts to view the hosts that reside on this datastore.
8 (Optional) Click Health to view details about the status of various parameters, such as Performance
service, Network, Physical disk, Data, Cluster, and Limits.
vSAN Concepts
VMware vSAN uses a software-defined approach that creates shared storage for virtual machines. It
virtualizes the local physical storage resources of ESXi hosts. It also turns them into pools of storage that
can be divided and assigned to virtual machines and applications according to their quality-of-service
requirements. vSAN is implemented directly in the ESXi hypervisor.
You can configure vSAN to work as either a hybrid or all-flash cluster. In hybrid clusters, flash devices are
used for the cache layer and magnetic disks are used for the storage capacity layer. In all-flash clusters,
flash devices are used for both cache and capacity.
You can activate vSAN on your existing host clusters and when you create clusters.
If vSAN is set to Auto mode, vSAN aggregates all free local capacity devices into a single datastore
shared by all hosts in the vSAN cluster. vSAN cannot use devices that are formatted and already contain
some information.
If vSAN is set to Manual mode, vSAN uses the local capacity devices that you claimed by using the
vSphere Web Client. If you did not claim any devices though the vSphere Web Client, your vSAN
datastore size is 0 MB.
You can expand the datastore by adding capacity devices or hosts with capacity devices to the cluster.
vSAN works best when all ESXi hosts in the cluster share similar or identical configurations across all
cluster members, including similar or identical storage configurations. This consistent configuration
balances virtual machine storage components across all devices and hosts in the cluster. Hosts without
any local devices also can participate and run their virtual machines on the vSAN datastore.
If a host contributes its local storage devices to the vSAN datastore, it must provide at least one device
for flash cache and at least one device for capacity. Capacity devices are also called data disks.
The devices on the contributing host form one or more disk groups. Each disk group contains one flash
cache device, and one or multiple capacity devices for persistent storage. Each host can be configured to
use multiple disk groups.
For best practices, capacity considerations, and general recommendations about designing and sizing a
vSAN cluster, see the VMware vSAN Design and Sizing Guide.
Characteristics of vSAN
This topic summarizes characteristics that apply to vSAN, its clusters, and datastores.
Shared storage support vSAN supports VMware features that require shared storage, such as
HA, vMotion, and DRS. For example, if a host becomes overloaded,
DRS can migrate virtual machines to other hosts in the cluster.
Just a Bunch Of Disks (JBOD) vSAN supports JBOD for use in a blade server environment. If your
cluster contains blade servers, you can extend the capacity of the
datastore with JBOD storage that is connected to the blade servers.
On-disk format vSAN 6.7 supports on-disk virtual file format 6.0, that provides highly
scalable snapshot and clone management support per vSAN cluster.
For information about the number of virtual machine snapshots and
clones supported per vSAN cluster, see the Configuration Maximums
documentation.
All-flash and hybrid configurations vSAN can be configured for all-flash or hybrid cluster.
Fault domains vSAN supports configuring fault domains to protect hosts from rack or
chassis failures when the vSAN cluster spans across multiple racks or
blade server chassis in a data center.
iSCSI target service vSAN iSCSI target service enables hosts and physical workloads that
reside outside the vSAN cluster to access the vSAN datastore.
Stretched cluster vSAN supports stretched clusters that span across two geographic
locations.
vSAN health service vSAN health service includes preconfigured health check tests to
monitor, troubleshoot, diagnose the cause of cluster component
problems, and identify any potential risk.
vSAN performance service vSAN performance service includes statistical charts used to monitor
IOPS, throughput, latency, and congestion. You can monitor
performance of a vSAN cluster, host, disk group, disk, and VMs.
Integration with vSphere storage features vSAN integrates with vSphere data management features traditionally
used with VMFS and NFS storage. These features include snapshots,
linked clones, vSphere Replication, and vSphere APIs for Data
Protection.
Virtual Machine Storage Policies vSAN works with VM storage policies to support a VM-centric approach
to storage management.
If you do not assign a storage policy to the virtual machine during
deployment, the vSAN Default Storage Policy is automatically assigned
to the VM.
®
Rapid provisioning vSAN enables rapid provisioning of storage in the vCenter Server
during virtual machine creation and deployment operations.
SDK support The VMware vSAN SDK for Java is an extension of the VMware
vSphere Management SDK. It includes documentation, libraries and
code examples that help developers automate installation,
configuration, monitoring, and troubleshooting of vSAN.
Prerequisites
vSAN service must be enabled in the vSphere Web Client before you can view the vSAN related screens
for a datastore.
Procedure
3 Click Monitor.
You are present with the vSAN, Host, and Health tabs in the UI.
Option Description
vSAN Displays the configurations for the current host. You can edit the settings for the claiming mode and deduplication.
You can also view the settings for:
n Encryption – vSAN supports encryption of the information for the whole vSAN datastore.
n ISCSI Service – Additional service through the iSCSI service.
n Performance Service - Collects data on how the datastore works. For example, the speed of a read/write
operation.
Hosts Displays a list of all the hosts on the vSAN server with their IP and the fault domain they belong to.
Health The Health tab contains tests organized in groups. You are present with the following groups:
n Performance Service
n Network
n Physical disk
n Data
n Cluster
n Limits
Each group is labeled with a status icon for an error, warning, unknown or healthy. The status of the group
represents the most severe state of the test belonging to that group. To view the tests and their descriptions, click
on the expand icon in the top right corner of the group of interest. From the expanded card you can review all the
tests belonging to the group, the result of their execution and get more information about what each test examines
on the system.
You can only edit the Claiming Mode and Deduplication settings for a vSAN datastore. These changes
take effect only on the current host. They are not synced to the other hosts participating into the vSAN
cluster.
Procedure
u If you select Auto, it automatically takes all disks and claims them in a group or groups of the
same size.
Note
The Auto mode is deprecated. It can only claim hybrid disk groups which are not compatible with
most of the vSAN features.
u If you select Manual, you must manually organize the disks in groups and reclaim them by using
the vSphere Web Client. For instance, selecting manual claiming mode is appropriate when the
vCenter Server is unavailable.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Adapters.
2 Click Rescan.
Procedure
1 Click Storage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Devices.
2 Click Rescan.
The Disk.MaxLUN parameter also determines how many LUNs the SCSI scan code attempts to discover
using individual INQUIRY commands if the SCSI target does not support direct discovery using
REPORT_LUNS.
You can modify the Disk.MaxLUN parameter depending on your needs. For example, if your environment
has a smaller number of storage devices with LUN IDs from 1 through 100, set the value to 101. As a
result, you can improve device discovery speed on targets that do not support REPORT_LUNS. Lowering
the value can shorten the rescan time and boot time. However, the time to rescan storage devices might
also depend on other factors, including the type of the storage system and the load on the storage
system.
In other cases, you might need to increase the value if your environment uses LUN IDs that are greater
than 1023.
Procedure
1 Click Manage in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Advanced Settings.
The SCSI scan code does not scan the LUNs with IDs greater than or equal to the value you enter.
For example, to discover LUN IDs from 0 to 100, set Disk.MaxLUN to 101.
n Change the Configuration of a TCP/IP Stack on a Host in the VMware Host Client
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Port groups.
Information about network details, virtual switch topology, NIC teaming policy, offload policy, and
security policy is displayed.
Procedure
1 Right-click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Add port group from the pop-
up menu.
The VLAN ID also reflects the VLAN tagging mode in the port group.
External Switch Tagging (EST) 0 The virtual switch does not pass traffic associated with a VLAN.
Virtual Switch Tagging (VST) From 1 to 4094 The virtual switch tags traffic with the tag that you entered.
Virtual Guest Tagging (VGT) 4095 Virtual machines handle VLANs. The virtual switch permits traffic from
any VLAN.
5 Expand Security and select options that you want to enable for promiscuous mode, MAC address
changes, and forged transmits.
6 Click Add.
7 (Optional) Click Refresh to display the new port group in the list.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Port groups.
2 Right-click the port group in the list that you want to edit and select Edit settings.
The VLAN ID reflects the VLAN tagging mode in the port group.
External Switch Tagging (EST) 0 The virtual switch does not pass traffic associated with a VLAN.
Virtual Switch Tagging (VST) From 1 to 4094 The virtual switch tags traffic with the tag that you entered.
Virtual Guest Tagging (VGT) 4095 Virtual machines handle VLANs. The virtual switch permits traffic from
any VLAN.
5 (Optional) Expand Security and select whether to reject, accept, or inherit the Security policy
exceptions from vSwitch.
Option Description
Promiscuous Mode n Reject. Placing a guest adapter in promiscuous mode has no effect on which
frames are received by the adapter.
n Accept. Placing a guest adapter in promiscuous mode causes it to detect all
frames passed on the vSphere distributed switch that are allowed under the
VLAN policy for the port group that the adapter is connected to.
n Inherit from vSwitch. Placing a guest adapter in promiscuous mode causes
it to inherit the configuration from the associated virtual switch.
MAC Address Changes n Reject. If you set the MAC Address Changes to Reject and the guest
operating system changes the MAC address of the adapter to anything other
than what is in the .vmx configuration file, all inbound frames are dropped.
If the guest operating system changes back the MAC address to match the
MAC address in the .vmx configuration file, inbound frames are passed
again.
n Accept. Changing the MAC address from the guest operating system has the
intended effect: frames to the new MAC address are received.
n Inherit from vSwitch. If you set MAC Address Changes to Inherit from
vSwitch, the MAC address changes to one of the associated virtual switches.
Forged Transmits n Reject. Any outbound frame with a source MAC address that is different from
the one set on the adapter are dropped.
n Accept. No filtering is performed and all outbound frames are passed.
n Inherit from vSwitch. The outbound frame configuration is inherited from the
associated virtual switch.
Option Description
Network Failover Detection Specify the method to use for failover detection.
n
Notify Switches Select Yes, No, or Inherit from vSwitch to notify switches in the case of failover.
If you select Yes, when a virtual NIC is connected to the distributed switch or that
virtual NIC’s traffic is routed over a different physical NIC in the team because of a
failover event, a notification is sent out over the network to update the lookup
tables on physical switches. In almost all cases, this process is preferred for the
lowest latency of failover occurrences and migrations with vMotion.
Note Do not use this option when the virtual machines using the port group are
using Microsoft Network Load Balancing in unicast mode. No such issue exists
with NLB running in multicast mode.
Option Description
Failback Select Yes, No, or Inherit from vSwitch to disable or enable failback.
This option determines how a physical adapter is returned to active duty after
recovering from a failure. If failback is set to the default setting of Yes, the adapter
returns to active duty immediately upon recovery, displacing the standby adapter
that took over its slot, if any. If failback is set to No, a failed adapter is left inactive
even after recovery until another currently active adapter fails, requiring its
replacement.
Failover Order Specify how to distribute the workload for uplinks. If you want to use some uplinks
but reserve others for emergencies in case the uplinks in use fail, set this
condition by moving them into different groups:
n Active Uplinks. Continue to use the uplink when the network adapter
connectivity is up and active.
n Standby Uplinks . Use this uplink if one of the active adapter’s connectivity
is down.
Note When using IP-hash load balancing, do not configure standby uplinks. You
cannot configure failover order if any of the port group components are configured
to inherit the configuration from the associated virtual switch.
7 (Optional) To configure traffic shaping, expand Traffic shaping, click Enabled, and specify the
following parameters.
Option Description
Average Bandwidth Establishes the number of bits per second to limit across a port, averaged over
time—the allowed average load.
Peak Bandwidth The maximum number of bits per second to limit across a port when it is
sending/receiving a burst of traffic. This is the maximum bandwidth used by a port
whenever it is using its burst bonus.
Burst Size The maximum number of bytes to limit in a burst. If this parameter is set, a port
might gain a burst bonus when it does not use all its allocated bandwidth.
Whenever the port needs more bandwidth than specified by Average
Bandwidth, it might be allowed to temporarily transmit data at a higher speed if a
burst bonus is available. This parameter represents the maximum number of
bytes that might be accumulated in the burst bonus and so transferred at a higher
speed.
Traffic shaping policy is applied to the traffic of each virtual network adapter attached to the virtual
switch.
Prerequisites
Verify that there are no VMkernel NICs and no powered-on virtual machines connected to the port group
that you want to remove.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Port groups.
2 Right-click the port group that you want to remove and select Remove from the pop-up menu.
4 (Optional) Click Refresh to verify that you have removed the port group.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Virtual switches.
Information about virtual switch configuration, network details, and virtual switch topology is
displayed.
Procedure
1 Right-click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Add standard vSwitch in the
pop-up menu.
2 (Optional) Click Add uplink to add a new physical uplink to a virtual switch.
3 Enter a name for the virtual switch and click Create virtual switch.
5 Expand Link discovery and select an option for the virtual switch mode.
Operation Description
Listen ESXi detects and displays information about the associated physical switch port,
but information about the vSphere Standard Switch is not available to the switch
administrator.
Advertise ESXi makes information about the vSphere Standard Switch available to the
switch administrator, but does not detect and display information about the
physical switch.
Both ESXi detects and displays information about the associated physical switch and
makes information about the vSphere Standard Switch available to the switch
administrator.
None ESXi does not detect or display information about the associated physical switch
port, and information about the vSphere Standard Switch is not available to the
switch administrator.
6 In the Protocol section, select Cisco Discovery Protocol from the drop-down menu.
7 Expand Security and accept or reject promiscuous mode, MAC address changes, and forged
transmits of the virtual machines attached to the standard switch.
Option Description
Promiscuous mode n Reject. The VM network adapter receives only frames that are addressed to
the virtual machine.
n Accept.The virtual switch forwards all frames to the virtual machine in
compliance with the active VLAN policy for the port to which the VM network
adapter is connected.
MAC address changes n Reject. If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual
machine to a value that is different from the MAC address of the VM network
adapter (set in the .vmx configuration file), the switch drops all inbound
frames to the adapter.
If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual machine
back to the MAC address of the VM network adapter, the virtual machine
receives frames again.
n Accept. If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual
machine to a value that is different from the MAC address of the VM network
adapter, the switch allows frames to the new address to pass.
Forged transmits n Reject. The switch drops any outbound frame from a virtual machine adapter
with a source MAC address that is different from the one in the .vmx
configuration file.
n Accept. The switch does not perform filtering, and permits all outbound
frames.
8 Click Add.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Virtual switches.
2 Right-click the virtual switch that you want to remove from the list and click Remove.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Virtual switches.
2 Click a virtual switch from the list and click Add uplink.
4 Click Save.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Virtual switches.
2 Right-click the virtual switch that you want to edit and click Edit Settings.
3 (Optional) Click Add uplink to add a new physical uplink to the virtual switch.
The MTU improves the networking efficiency by increasing the amount of payload data transmitted
with a single packet, that is, enabling jumbo frames.
5 (Optional) Click the Remove icon ( ) to remove the old uplink from the virtual switch.
6 Expand Link discovery and select an option for the virtual switch mode.
Operation Description
Listen ESXi detects and displays information about the associated physical switch port,
but information about the vSphere Standard Switch is not available to the switch
administrator.
Advertise ESXi makes information about the vSphere Standard Switch available to the
switch administrator, but does not detect and display information about the
physical switch.
Both ESXi detects and displays information about the associated physical switch and
makes information about the vSphere Standard Switch available to the switch
administrator.
None ESXi does not detect or display information about the associated physical switch
port, and information about the vSphere Standard Switch is not available to the
switch administrator.
7 In the Protocol section, select Cisco Discovery Protocol from the drop-down menu.
8 Expand Security and accept or reject promiscuous mode, MAC address changes, and forged
transmits of the virtual machines attached to the standard switch.
Option Description
Promiscuous mode n Reject. The VM network adapter receives only frames that are addressed to
the virtual machine.
n Accept.The virtual switch forwards all frames to the virtual machine in
compliance with the active VLAN policy for the port to which the VM network
adapter is connected.
MAC address changes n Reject. If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual
machine to a value that is different from the MAC address of the VM network
adapter (set in the .vmx configuration file), the switch drops all inbound
frames to the adapter.
If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual machine
back to the MAC address of the VM network adapter, the virtual machine
receives frames again.
n Accept. If the guest OS changes the effective MAC address of the virtual
machine to a value that is different from the MAC address of the VM network
adapter, the switch allows frames to the new address to pass.
Forged transmits n Reject. The switch drops any outbound frame from a virtual machine adapter
with a source MAC address that is different from the one in the .vmx
configuration file.
n Accept. The switch does not perform filtering, and permits all outbound
frames.
Option Description
Network Failover Detection Specify the method to use for failover detection.
n Link Status only. Relies only on the link status that the network adapter
provides. This option detects failures, such as cable pulls and physical switch
power failures, but not configuration errors, such as a physical switch port
being blocked by spanning tree or that is misconfigured to the wrong VLAN or
cable pulls on the other side of a physical switch.
n Beacon only. Sends out and listens for beacon probes on all NICs in the
team and uses this information, in addition to link status, to determine link
failure. This detects many of the failures previously mentioned that are not
detected by link status alone.
Notify Switches Select Yes, No, or Inherit from vSwitch to notify switches in the case of failover.
If you select Yes, whenever a virtual NIC is connected to the distributed switch or
whenever that virtual NIC’s traffic would be routed over a different physical NIC in
the team because of a failover event, a notification is sent out over the network to
update the lookup tables on physical switches. In almost all cases, this process is
desirable for the lowest latency of failover occurrences and migrations with
vMotion.
Note Do not use this option when the virtual machines using the port group are
using Microsoft Network Load Balancing in unicast mode. No such issue exists
with NLB running in multicast mode.
Option Description
Failback Select Yes, No, or Inherit from vSwitch to disable or enable failback.
This option determines how a physical adapter is returned to active duty after
recovering from a failure. If failback is set to Yes (default), the adapter is returned
to active duty immediately upon recovery, displacing the standby adapter that
took over its slot, if any. If failback is set to No, a failed adapter is left inactive
even after recovery until another currently active adapter fails, requiring its
replacement.
Failover Order Specify how to distribute the work load for uplinks. If you want to use some
uplinks but reserve others for emergencies in case the uplinks in use fail, set this
condition by moving them into different groups:
n Active Uplinks. Continue to use the uplink when the network adapter
connectivity is up and active.
n Standby Uplinks . Use this uplink if one of the active adapter’s connectivity
is down.
Note When using IP-hash load balancing, do not configure standby uplinks.
10 (Optional) To configure traffic shaping, expand Traffic shaping, click Enabled, and specify the
following parameters.
Option Description
Average Bandwidth Establishes the number of bits per second to allow across a port, averaged over
time—the allowed average load.
Peak Bandwidth The maximum number of bits per second to allow across a port when it is sending
or receiving a burst of traffic. This tops the bandwidth used by a port whenever it
is using its burst bonus.
Burst Size The maximum number of bytes to allow in a burst. If this parameter is set, a port
may gain a burst bonus when it doesn’t use all its allocated bandwidth. Whenever
the port needs more bandwidth than specified by Average Bandwidth, it may be
allowed to temporarily transmit data at a higher speed if a burst bonus is
available. This parameter tops the number of bytes that may be accumulated in
the burst bonus and thus transferred at a higher speed.
Traffic shaping policy is applied to the traffic of each virtual network adapter attached to the virtual
switch.
11 Click Save.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Physical NICs.
2 Click on the network adapter that you want to view information about.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Physical NICs.
3 Click Edit settings and select a speed from the drop-down menu.
4 Click Save.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click VMkernel NICs.
Procedure
1 Right-click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Add VMkernel NIC.
2 In the Add VMkernel NIC dialog box, configure the settings for the VMkernel adapter.
Option Description
New port group Label Adding a VMkernel NIC also adds a port group. Specify a name for that port
group.
VLAN ID Enter a VLAN ID to determine the VLAN for the network traffic of the VMkernel
adapter to use.
Note The IPv6 option does not appear on hosts that do not have IPv6 enabled.
4 (Optional) Expand the IPv4 settings section to select an option for obtaining IP addresses.
Option Description
Use DHCP to obtain IP settings IP settings are obtained automatically. A DHCP server must be present on the
network.
Use static IP settings Enter the IPv4 address and subnet mask for the VMkernel adapter.
The VMkernel Default Gateway and DNS server addresses for IPv4 are obtained
from the selected TCP/IP stack.
5 (Optional) Expand the IPv6 settings section to select an option for obtaining IPv6 addresses.
Option Description
DHCPv6 Use DHCP to obtain IPv6 addresses. A DHCPv6 server must be present on the
network.
Static IPv6 Addresses a Click Add address to add a new IPv6 address.
b Enter the IPv6 address and subnet prefix length.
After you set a TCP/IP stack for the VMkernel adapter, you cannot change it. If you select the vMotion
or the Provisioning TCP/IP stack, you can use only this stack to handle vMotion or for Provisioning
traffic on the host. All VMkernel adapters for vMotion on the default TCP/IP stack are disabled for
future vMotion sessions. If you use the Provisioning TCP/IP stack, VMkernel adapters on the default
TCP/IP stack are disabled, and you cannot perform some operations. Such operations include traffic
Provisioning, such as virtual machine cold migration, cloning, and snapshot migration.
7 (Optional) Select the services to enable for the default TCP/IP stack on the host.
vMotion enables the VMkernel adapter to advertise itself to another host as the network connection
where vMotion traffic is sent. You cannot use vMotion to perform migrations to selected hosts if the
vMotion service is not enabled for any VMkernel adapter on the default TCP/IP stack, or if no
adapters use the vMotion TCP/IP stack.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click VMkernel NICs.
2 Select the VMkernel adapter that resides on the target standard switch, click Actions, and select Edit
settings from the drop-down menu.
The VLAN ID determines the VLAN that the network traffic of the VMkernel adapter uses.
4 (Optional) To edit the IP version, select IPv4, IPv6, or both from the drop-down list.
Note The IPv6 option does not appear on hosts that do not have IPv6 enabled.
5 (Optional) Expand the IPv4 settings section to select an option for obtaining IP addresses.
Option Description
Use DHCP to obtain IP settings IP settings are obtained automatically. A DHCP server must be present on the
network.
Use static IP settings Enter the IPv4 address and subnet mask for the VMkernel adapter.
The VMkernel Default Gateway and DNS server addresses for IPv4 are obtained
from the selected TCP/IP stack.
6 (Optional) Expand the IPv6 settings section to select an option for obtaining IPv6 addresses.
Option Description
DHCPv6 Use DHCP to obtain IPv6 addresses. A DHCPv6 server must be present on the
network.
Static IPv6 Addresses a Click Add address to add a new IPv6 address.
b Enter the IPv6 address and subnet prefix length.
7 (Optional) Select the service to enable or disable for the default TCP/IP stack on the host.
vMotion enables the VMkernel adapter to advertise itself to another host as the network connection
where vMotion traffic is sent. It is not possible to use vMotion to perform migrations to selected hosts
if the vMotion service is not enabled for any VMkernel adapter on the default TCP/IP stack, or if no
adapters use the vMotion TCP/IP stack.
8 Review your setting modifications and click Save to apply your changes.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click VMkernel NICs.
2 Right-click the VMkernel adapter that you want to remove and click Remove.
Procedure
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click TCP/IP stacks.
3 Specify how the host obtains settings for this TCP/IP stack.
n Select the Use DHCP services from the following adapter radio button, and select an adapter
from which to receive the default settings configuration for the TCP/IP stack.
n Select the Manually configure the settings for this TCP/IP stack to change the settings
configuration.
Option Description
Basic configuration
Host name Edit the name of your local host.
Note Removing the default gateway might cause you to lose your connection to
the host.
Advanced Settings Edit the congestion control algorithm and the maximum number of connections.
4 Click Save.
As you open ports on the firewall, consider that unrestricted access to services running on an ESXi host
may expose a host to outside attacks and unauthorized access. Reduce the risk by configuring the ESXi
firewall to allow access only from authorized networks.
Note The firewall also allows Internet Control Message Protocol, or ICMP, pings and communication
with DHCP and DNS (UDP only) clients.
Note If different services have overlapping port rules, enabling one service might implicitly enable other
services. You can specify which IP addresses are allowed to access each service on the host to avoid this
problem.
Procedure
The VMware Host Client displays a list of active incoming and outgoing connections with the
corresponding firewall ports.
3 For some services you can manage service details. Right-click a service and select an option from
the pop-up menu.
n Use the Start, Stop, or Restart buttons to change the status of a service temporarily.
n Change the Startup Policy to configure the service to start and stop with the host, the firewall
ports, or manually.
Procedure
1 Click Networking in the VMware Host Client inventory and click Firewall rules.
3 In the Allowed IP Addresses section, click Only allow connections from the following networks
and enter the IP addresses of networks that you want to connect to the host.
Separate IP addresses with commas. You can use the following address formats:
n 192.168.0.0/24
n 192.168.1.2, 2001::1/64
n fd3e:29a6:0a81:e478::/64
4 Click OK.
Procedure
4 Click Monitor under the port group name in the VMware Host Client inventory.
5 (Optional) Click Events to view the events associated with the port group.
Procedure
4 Click Monitor under the virtual switch name in the VMware Host Client inventory.
5 (Optional) Click Events to view the events associated with the virtual switch.
Procedure
The physical network adapter expands in the VMware Host Client inventory.
4 Click Monitor under the physical network adapter name in the VMware Host Client inventory.
5 (Optional) Click Events to view the events associated with the physical network adapter.
Procedure
The VMkernel network adapter expands in the VMware Host Client inventory.
4 Click Monitor under the VMkernel network adapter name in the VMware Host Client inventory.
5 (Optional) Click Events to view the events associated with the VMkernel network adapter.
Procedure
4 Click Monitor under the TCP/IP stack name in the VMware Host Client inventory.
5 (Optional) Click Events to view the events associated with the TCP/IP stack.
6 (Optional) Click Tasks to view the tasks associated with the TCP/IP stack.