Book Image

VMware Virtual SAN Cookbook

Book Image

VMware Virtual SAN Cookbook

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (18 chapters)
VMware Virtual SAN Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Investigating disk failures


When a disk fails in VSAN, it is important to address the problem by replacing the disk. A key part of this may be determining why the failure was triggered. Determining which disks have failed is a straightforward operation in vSphere Web Client. Determining the cause of the failure will involve investigating the ESXi system logs.

Getting ready

  • You should be logged into vSphere Web Client as an administrator

  • You should be logged in to the affected ESXi host as the root, preferably via SSH

How to do it…

  1. If you have configured VSAN alarms according to Chapter 4, Monitoring VSAN, when a disk fails you will be presented with an alert icon on the ESXi host and Triggered Alarms will reflect a disk error:

  2. The failed disk will also be reflected in the Disk Management view:

  3. From here, it is fairly straightforward to remove the failed disks and replace them if desired. However, finding out why the disks have failed will require examining the applicable host's /var/log/vmkernel...