![]() ![]() This article is focused mostly on small home labs, was voluntarily authored, and not associated with my employment at VMware. This method doesn't have quite as easy a way to revert if things go wrong.Īll hypervisor upgrades come with risks, including the slight possibility of losing your network connections, so proceed at your own risk only after reading the entire article, and after backing up your hypervisor first, as detailed below.ĭisclaimer/Disclosure - I cannot feasibly provide support for your upgrade, especially given the variety of unsupported hardware out there, see full disclaimer at below-left. It's actuallly a one-liner that side-steps the preferred VUM method for those without VCSA, and/or those without a My VMware account or and expired trial, instead downloading the patch directly. The ESXCLI method of updating is a more universal way to upgrade ESXi that works even for the free hypervisor. I'm still working on testing and documenting this process. This article is a work in progress, and note that you need to upgrade VCSA to 6.7 before you upgrade your ESXi host(s) to 6.7. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |