6.5.1

Table Of Contents
Table 54. VMware Storage Controller Compatibility (Continued)
Existing
Controller Added Controller
BusLogic
Parallel LSI Logic
LSI Logic
SAS
VMware
Paravirtual
SCSI AHCI SATA IDE NVME
IDE Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes N/A Yes
NVME Requires
BIOS setup
Requires
BIOS setup
Usually
Works
Usually
Works
Requires
BIOS setup
Yes Usually Works
Add a 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.
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. To verify
support, see the VMware Compatibility Guides 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 SCSI and SATA
Storage Controller Conditions, Limitations, and Compatibility.
n
Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Configuration.Add or remove device privilege on the
virtual machine.
Procedure
1 Right-click a virtual machine in the inventory and select Edit Settings.
2 Click the Virtual Hardware tab, and select SATA Controller from the New device drop-down menu.
3 Click Add.
The controller appears in the Virtual Hardware devices list.
4 Click OK.
What to do next
You can add a hard disk or CD/DVD drive to the virtual machine and assign it to the new controller.
vSphere Virtual Machine Administration
VMware, Inc. 137