6.7

Table Of Contents
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If a host that uses a shared diagnostic partition fails, reboot the host and extract log files immediately
after the failure. Otherwise, the second host that fails before you collect the diagnostic data of the first
host might save the core dump.
Procedure
1 Navigate to the host.
2 Right-click the host, and select Add Diagnostic Partition.
If you do not see this menu item, the host already has a diagnostic partition.
3 Specify the type of diagnostic partition.
Menu Item Description
Private local Creates the diagnostic partition on a local disk. This partition stores fault
information only for your host.
Private SAN storage Creates the diagnostic partition on a non-shared SAN LUN. This partition stores
fault information only for your host.
Shared SAN storage Creates the diagnostic partition on a shared SAN LUN. Multiple hosts can access
this partition. It can store fault information for more than one host.
4 Click Next.
5 Select the device to use for the diagnostic partition and click Next.
6 Review the partition configuration information and click Finish.
Verify a Diagnostic Partition
Use the esxcli command to verify whether a diagnostic partition is set.
Prerequisites
Install vCLI or deploy the vSphere Management Assistant (vMA) virtual machine. See Getting Started with
vSphere Command-Line Interfaces. For troubleshooting, run esxcli commands in the ESXi Shell.
Procedure
u
List partitions to verify that a diagnostic partition is set.
esxcli system coredump partition list
If a diagnostic partition is set, the command displays information about it. Otherwise, the command shows
that no partition is activated and configured.
What to do next
To manage the host’s diagnostic partition, use the vCLI commands. See vSphere Command-Line
Interface Concepts and Examples.
vSphere Storage
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