6.7

Table Of Contents
Ensuring that Storage Provider Is Available
To access vSphere Virtual Volumes storage, your ESXi host requires a storage provider (VASA provider).
To ensure that the storage provider is always available, follow these guidelines:
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Do not migrate a storage provider VM to Virtual Volumes storage.
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Back up your storage provider VM.
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When appropriate, use vSphere HA or Site Recovery Manager to protect the storage provider VM.
Troubleshooting Virtual Volumes
The troubleshooting topics provide solutions to problems that you might encounter when using Virtual
Volumes.
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Virtual Volumes and esxcli Commands
You can use the esxcli storage vvol commands to troubleshoot your Virtual Volumes
environment.
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Virtual Datastore Is Inaccessible
After you create a virtual datastore, it remains inaccessible.
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Failures When Migrating VMs or Deploying VM OVFs to Virtual Volumes Datastores
Your attempts to migrate a virtual machine or to deploy a VM OVF to virtual datastores fail.
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Failed Attempts to Migrate VMs with Memory Snapshots to and from Virtual Datastores
When you attempt to migrate a VM with hardware version 10 or earlier to and from a vSphere Virtual
Volumes datastore, failures occur if the VM has memory snapshots.
Virtual Volumes and esxcli Commands
You can use the esxcli storage vvol commands to troubleshoot your Virtual Volumes environment.
The following command options are available:
Table 221. esxcli storage vvol commands
Namespace Command Option Description
esxcli storage core device list
Identify protocol endpoints. The
output entry Is VVOL PE: true
indicates that the storage device is
a protocol endpoint.
esxcli storage vvol daemon unbindall
Unbind all virtual volumes from all
VASA providers known to the ESXi
host.
esxcli storage vvol
protocolendpoint
list
List all protocol endpoints that your
host can access.
vSphere Storage
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