6.7

Table Of Contents
Solution
Problem Solution
Cannot remove a
host from a
distributed switch
1 In the vSphere Web Client, navigate to the distributed switch.
2 On the Configure tab, select More > Ports.
3 Locate all ports that are still in use and check which VMkernel or virtual machine network adapters on
the host are still attached to the ports.
4 Migrate or delete the VMkernel and virtual machine network adapters that are still connected to the
switch.
5 Use the Add and Manage Hosts wizard in the vSphere Web Client to remove the host from the switch.
After the host is removed, the host proxy switch is deleted automatically.
Cannot remove a
host proxy switch
1 In the vSphere Web Client, navigate to the host.
2 Delete or migrate any VMkernel or virtual machine network adapters that are still connected to the host
proxy switch.
3 Delete the host proxy switch from the Networking view on the host.
Hosts on a vSphere Distributed Switch Lose Connectivity
to vCenter Server
Hosts on a vSphere Distributed Switch and later cannot connect to vCenter Server after a port group
configuration.
Problem
After you change the networking configuration of a port group on a vSphere Distributed Switch that
contains the VMkernel adapters for the management network, the hosts on the switch lose connectivity to
vCenter Server. In the vSphere Web Client the status of the hosts is nonresponsive.
Cause
On a vSphere Distributed Switch in vCenter Server that has networking rollback disabled, the port group
containing the VMkernel adapters for the management network is misconfigured in vCenter Server and
the invalid configuration is propagated to the hosts on the switch.
Note In vSphere networking rollback is enabled by default. However, you can enable or disable
rollbacks at the vCenter Server level. For more information see the vSphere Networking documentation.
Solution
1 From the Direct Console User Interface (DCUI) to an affected host, use the Restore vDS option from
the Network Restore Options menu to configure the uplinks and the ID of the VLAN for the
management network.
The DCUI creates a local ephemeral port and applies the VLAN and uplink configuration to the port.
The DCUI changes the VMkernel adapter for the management network to use the new host local port
to restore connectivity to vCenter Server.
vSphere Networking
VMware, Inc. 258