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Table Of Contents
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Users defined in the DCUI.Access advanced option for the host. This option can be used to enable
access in case of catastrophic failure.
For ESXi 6.0 and later, user permissions are preserved when you enable lockdown mode. User
permissions are restored when you disable lockdown mode from the Direct Console Interface.
Note If you upgrade a host that is in lockdown mode to ESXi version 6.0 without exiting lockdown mode,
and if you exit lockdown mode after the upgrade, all permissions defined before the host entered
lockdown mode are lost. The system assigns the administrator role to all users who are found in the
DCUI.Access advanced option to guarantee that the host remains accessible.
To retain permissions, disable lockdown mode for the host from the vSphere Web Client before the
upgrade.
Procedure
1 At the Direct Console User Interface of the host, press F2 and log in.
2 Scroll to the Configure Lockdown Mode setting and press Enter to toggle the current setting.
3 Press Esc until you return to the main menu of the Direct Console User Interface.
Specifying Accounts with Access Privileges in Lockdown Mode
You can specify service accounts that can access the ESXi host directly by adding them to the Exception
Users list. You can specify a single user who can access the ESXi host in case of catastrophic
vCenter Server failure.
The vSphere version determines what different accounts can do by default when lockdown mode is
enabled, and how you can change the default behavior.
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In vSphere 5.0 and earlier, only the root user can log in to the Direct Console User Interface on an
ESXi host that is in lockdown mode.
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In vSphere 5.1 and later, you can add a user to the DCUI.Access advanced system setting for each
host. The option is meant for catastrophic failure of vCenter Server. Companies usually lock the
password for the user with this access into a safe. A user in the DCUI.Access list does not need to
have full administrative privileges on the host.
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In vSphere 6.0 and later, the DCUI.Access advanced system setting is still supported. In addition,
vSphere 6.0 and later supports an Exception User list, which is for service accounts that have to log
in to the host directly. Accounts with administrator privileges that are on the Exception Users list can
log in to the ESXi Shell. In addition, those users can log in to a host's DCUI in normal lockdown mode
and can exit lockdown mode.
You specify Exception Users from the vSphere Web Client.
Note Exception users are host local users or Active Directory users with privileges defined locally for
the ESXi host. Users that are members of an Active Directory group lose their permissions when the
host is in lockdown mode.
vSphere Security
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