Hi
Its a virtual vcenter?
Wich version of nfs are you using?
El 24/01/2013 11:58, Sebastian Gabler sequoiamo...@gmx.net escribió:
Hello,
I am using a share via nfs as esxi datastore for more than a year. 3 hosts
have root access. I have added a vcenter server appliance to manage the
esxi
On 01/24/2013 03:57 PM, Sebastian Gabler wrote:
Hello,
I am using a share via nfs as esxi datastore for more than a year. 3
hosts have root access. I have added a vcenter server appliance to
manage the esxi hosts, and added the vcenter server's IP address to the
allowed hosts using zfs set
On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 03:57:41PM +0100, Sebastian Gabler wrote:
Hello,
I am using a share via nfs as esxi datastore for more than a year. 3
hosts have root access. I have added a vcenter server appliance to
manage the esxi hosts, and added the vcenter server's IP address to
the allowed
On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 05:03:34PM +0100, Marcel Telka wrote:
On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 03:57:41PM +0100, Sebastian Gabler wrote:
Hello,
I am using a share via nfs as esxi datastore for more than a year. 3
hosts have root access. I have added a vcenter server appliance to
manage the esxi
Dear all,
I found the problem after some desperate changes by accident, using Saso's
recommendation #2. Vcsa apparently uses another interface to access data stores
than for management console. After giving the management interface rw access to
the store instead of root, the second,
On 01/25/2013 12:01 AM, Sebastian Gabler wrote:
Dear all,
I found the problem after some desperate changes by accident, using Saso's
recommendation #2. Vcsa apparently uses another interface to access data
stores than for management console. After giving the management interface rw
access