![]() So while the next version of vSphere will allow boot from removable media, it will move the OSData partition to a persistent device.īased on customer feedback, VMware has made the decision to continue supporting USB/SD card through the next major release of VMware vSphere. Instability is a likely consequence of both issues – yet stability is very much a virtue VMware extolls. Removable storage is not built to handle that much traffic and can also wear out faster than enterprise-grade devices. That role means the ESX-OSData partition sees a lot of read/write action, at high speed. vSphere 7.x creates four partitions, one of which – ESX-OSData – stores configuration and system state data. ![]() VMware has good reason to discourage booting from non-persistent media. If you must use USB media, the article states, use a solid state disk. The article points out several times that booting from non-persistent media is a bad idea. Whatever the reason, VMware appears to have changed course somewhat grudgingly. VMware fixes vSphere release it pulled, sorts out Log4j while it's at it.VMware offers hardware compatibility list for home labs.SDN contender Pluribus ports network OS to Nvidia SmartNICs.VMware says server sprawl is back, and SmartNICs are the solution.The Reg has requested a comment and we'll let you know should one arrive. ![]() Why the U-turn, you very reasonably ask? The knowledge base article offers no reason. ![]()
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