Specifications

Table Of Contents
vCenter Server is installed with the migrated SSL certifiicates and vCenter Server database from your
Windows Server 2003 installation.
What to do next
After you complete the installation, use the vSphere Web Client to connect to vCenter Server.
Review the topics in Chapter 5, “After You Upgrade vCenter Server,” on page 127 for other postinstallation
actions you might want to take.
vCenter Single Sign-On Installation Fails
In a Windows environment, vCenter Single Sign-On installation might fail for several reasons.
Problem
The vCenter Single Sign-On installation fails in a Windows environment.
Cause
Multiple causes of an installation failure.
Solution
1 Verify that all installation setup prerequisites are met.
At the time the installation fails, the installer displays a message similar to ####: Installation failed
due to....
2 At a command line, run the following command to gather a vCenter Single Sign-On support bundle.
C:\Windows\System32\cscript.exe "SSO Server\scripts\sso-support.wsf" /z
3 Click OK
4 View the logs in %TEMP%\vminst.log for details about the failure and possible solutions.
For a complete list of logs, see VMware Knowledge Base article 2033430.
Updating vCenter Server with Service Packs
VMware provides service packs to update the vCenter Server 5.x software and third-party components.
vCenter Server service pack releases can include updates to vCenter Server, Inventory Service, vCenter
Single Sign On, and Profile-Driven Storage Service.
vCenter Server 5.x service packs will be available from the VMware Web site. The service pack update
process updates files and registry settings required by vCenter Server, and restart Windows services that are
stopped during the update.
NOTE Installing an update on Windows Server 2008 or later with User Account Control (UAC) turned on
requires Administrator privileges. The logged in user must be Administrator, or an Administrators group
member whose privileges are elevated to the Administrator level. See “Elevate Administrators Group
Privileges to Administrator Level in Windows Server 2008,” on page 119.
vSphere Upgrade
118 VMware, Inc.