2.7

Table Of Contents
Disk Usage Exceeds Acceptable Levels
A system alert notifies you that disk usage exceeds acceptable levels.
Problem
System alerts notify you that disk usage exceeds acceptable levels for the disk containing /opt/aurora/dbg.
Cause
Diagnostic support packages and system core files may be taking of storage space.
Solution
1 In the vSphere client, open the console for the Management Server virtual machine, and navigate
to /opt/aurora/dbg/core.
2 Check for diagnostic support packages and core files (core dumps) and remove them.
If you want to use the core files to diagnose or debug system errors, copy them to another disk.
Resource Bundles Become Unusable Because DRS Is Disabled
When a vSphere administrator disables DRS for the cluster that Data Director uses, all resource pools become
unavailable.
Problem
If a vSphere administrators disables DRS functionality for the Data Director cluster from the vSphere Client,
all resource pools become unavailable and the installation is unusable. Resource bundles, database groups,
and storage and backup storage no longer work properly.
Renabling the cluster for DRS does not resolve the issue. No automated way for recovering from the situation
exists.
Cause
vCenter Server supports resource pools only for clusters that have DRS enabled.
Solution
1 Reenable DRS for the cluster.
2 Delete all resource bundles and database groups that use the affected cluster.
3 Recreate the resource pools in vSphere, and recreate the resource bundles and database groups in Data
Director.
4 Import each database virtual machine into Data Director.
Missing Resource Pool
When you create a resource bundle, the resource pool you want to use is not included in the list of resource
pools.
Problem
When you create a resource bundle you assign a resource pool that encapsulates the CPU and memory
resources. The resource pool you want to use is not available in the list of resource pools to choose from.
VMware vFabric Data Director Administrator and User Guide
214 VMware, Inc.