ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
Is hardware virtualization enabled in guest CPU?
It is enabled on host, if that's what you meant.
Expand guest CPU configuration, it's a checkbox there.
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@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's SCSI controller and network type?
LSI Logic SAS - VM Network, E1000e, Auto Mac which has been reserverd via DHCP
You should have VMware paravirtual and VMXNET 3
I changed this to what you recommended but no change.
SCSI controller change is not that simple, it will most likely cause BSOD if not done properly. But if you did that successfully and still have the issues, it's possible that guest installation is damaged. I would setup another VM, but this time select proper hardware and various options, such as said hardware virtualization before actually installing guest OS.
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@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
Is hardware virtualization enabled in guest CPU?
It is enabled on host, if that's what you meant.
Expand guest CPU configuration, it's a checkbox there.
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
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@marcinozga Sure thing. Why do you recommend Paravirtual, and VMXNET 3?
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@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
"ESXi 6.7 virtual machine" is all it says
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga Sure thing. Why do you recommend Paravirtual, and VMXNET 3?
Both are paravirtualized, giving you best berformance. LSI SAS and e1000 are generic devices, kind of a fallback, like vga mode for video card when no drivers are installed.
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
"ESXi 6.7 virtual machine" is all it says
You should have an option to upgrade VM compatibility to 15. You should also have an option to select it when creating new machine.
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@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
"ESXi 6.7 virtual machine" is all it says
You should have an option to upgrade VM compatibility to 15. You should also have an option to select it when creating new machine.
I only get these. Does that mean perhaps the installer for ESXi for Host was out of date? My boss installed it and I can't be sure it was the right one.
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@marcinozga @marcinozga said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
What's the VM version of guest?
Windows Server 2016 or later (64-bit)
I guess I wasn't clear. I meant hardware compatibility version, it should be ESXi 6.7 Update 2 and later (VM version 15).
6.7.0 Update 3 (Build 15160138)
"ESXi 6.7 virtual machine" is all it says
You should have an option to upgrade VM compatibility to 15. You should also have an option to select it when creating new machine.
I only get these. Does that mean perhaps the installer for ESXi for Host was out of date? My boss installed it and I can't be sure it was the right one.
Pick the last one, 6.7 U2. It shouldn't matter much, but I've seen weirder things happen.
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Did you use the Dell ESXI Image?
Did you update all drivers, along with NIC drivers on the host?On there is a post about 6.7 U3 running crappy on Dell's. I don't know if there was a resolution on that or not. (Based on no definite answer, I have a new R440, Single 4210 CPU, RAID 1 SSD's and 128GB RAM with 6.7U2 with no issues)
If none of @marcinozga fixes work, you may just want to start from scratch, update all drivers, use Dell OEM Esxi 6.7U2, create a generic W2016 VM with 2 CPU's, 12 GB RAM and 100 GB drive for the OS (we can add drives later).
Use VMXNET NIC adapter instead of E1000e. It will only add the NIC after you install guest tools.
That should fly (depending on the HD's you have installed) when all done.
If that all works fine, then you can try again with 6.7 U3.
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@pmoncho Thank you. The only thing I haven't tried that you listed yet is the Dell ESXi 6.7 U2 version part. Trying that now.
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@pmoncho Thank you. The only thing I haven't tried that you listed yet is the Dell ESXi 6.7 U2 version part. Trying that now.
Give it a shot. It doesn't take that long to install and/or upgrade.
Also, where are you installing ESXI? On HD, USB or SD card?
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@pmoncho Directly to HD
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@G-I-Jones said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
@pmoncho Directly to HD
This is fine for a lab but do not do this for production. It could make upgrading/reloading much more difficult later.
For VMware, I would use USB or SD cards if possible. ESXI is only like 500 MB's and that is it. You can store the ESXi logs on normal storage. There are numerous sites out there with instructions.
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You really only need a 4GB USB key but I like to use 8GB or higher as they are still cheap for a higher quality USB key.
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ESXi recommends SD card, USB is a bit to fragile for the number of writes you'd be making to it.
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This is fine for a lab but do not do this for production. It could make upgrading/reloading much more difficult later.
For VMware, I would use USB or SD cards if possible. ESXI is only like 500 MB's and that is it. You can store the ESXi logs on normal storage. There are numerous sites out there with instructions.
Wow, I had no idea. We've been doing it wrong for over a year now :man_facepalming_medium_skin_tone:
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@DustinB3403 said in ESXi 6.7 Troubleshooting:
ESXi recommends SD card, USB is a bit to fragile for the number of writes you'd be making to it.
I agree with @DustinB3403 My new 440 has SD cards in a RAID 1 so I feel much better.
On the flip side, I have only had four USB keys go bad on me in 11 years with 13 servers. It is not a big sample size but it is something.
I like to use SanDisk Ultra Fit 32GB. Going strong for 6 years so far. Plus they are small so it can won't mess with the bezel or knock it with your hand or shoulder. Transcend kinda suck. Had three of those go bad on me over 8 years.