Hasn't anything at all to do with the ini, it's the filesystem that the target exports. iSCSI is not a file sharing protocol, you likely have already corrupted the ntfs filesystem on the 5tb volume you have done with this.
Although the ini often needs to support scsi reservations (ms ini does) the underlying filesystem has to know how to deal with concurrent access, vmfs is a cluster aware fs and hence can do this. ntfs is *not* a cluster aware fs. I sure as hell hope nothing you needed was being exported on that target:) Its not a matter of maybe, you have damaged that fs already. From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 8:42 PM To: NT System Admin Issues Subject: Re: iSCSI and shared volumes This isn't a Microsoft issue. Most iSCSI initiators are not set to handle writes to a volume from other volumes. ASB (My XeeSM Profile)<http://XeeSM.com/AndrewBaker> Exploiting Technology for Business Advantage... Signature powered by WiseStamp<http://www.wisestamp.com/email-install> On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 8:26 PM, Ziots, Edward <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Why I love ESX soo much, don't have to worry about M$ shared volume issues with failover of VM's and accessing .VMDK and .VMX files from the same volume, updating them and likewise. Z Edward E. Ziots CISSP, Network +, Security + Network Engineer Lifespan Organization Email:[email protected]<mailto:email%[email protected]> Cell:401-639-3505 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 8:14 PM To: NT System Admin Issues Subject: Re: iSCSI and shared volumes Time for plan B. :) You have correctly surmised the problem. -ASB: http://XeeSM.com/AndrewBaker Sent from my Motorola Droid On Jul 20, 2010 7:30 PM, "Mark Smith" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: I have a few 2008 R2 servers that are stand alone (not clustered) Hyper-V hosts. They are connected via iSCSI to a single 5TB volume on a DELL/Equallogic PE6000 iSCSI target. The idea is to have the VM's for all the Hyper-V hosts in one volume on the PE6000 and have all the hosts access that same volume simultaneously. I am having a problem in that when one host writes to the volume the other hosts don't see the changes. Should this configuration work as I'm intending or do I need to go with clustering in R2 and use CSV (Cluster Shared Volume) ? ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/> ~
