Which action should the administrator take on the vmkernel portgroup on all hosts used by Virtual SAN cluster to resolve this problem?

A vSphere administrator observes a problem with the Virtual SAN Cluster Setting as shown:
— Exhibit —

— Exhibit —

Which action should the administrator take on the vmkernel portgroup on all hosts used by Virtual
SAN cluster to resolve this problem?

A vSphere administrator observes a problem with the Virtual SAN Cluster Setting as shown:
— Exhibit —

— Exhibit —

Which action should the administrator take on the vmkernel portgroup on all hosts used by Virtual
SAN cluster to resolve this problem?

A.
Select the Virtual SAN traffic option

B.
Increase the MTU value

C.
Change the DNS server address

D.
Increase the Port Speed

Explanation:



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Bart

Bart

http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/search.do?cmd=displayKC&docType=kc&docTypeID=DT_KB_1_1&externalId=2058368

On Standard vSwitch Step 9 AND On Distributed vSwitch Step 6.:
In the Port properties page, select Virtual SAN traffic, configure the settings for the VMkernel adapter, and enter appropriate values in these required fields:

Network label – Enter a label. For example, Virtual SAN.
VLAN ID – If you are using VLANs to separate Virtual SAN traffic, enter the relevant VLAN ID.
IP Settings – Enter the desired IPv4 network details (DHCP, if applicable).
TCP/IP stack – Select the relevant TCP/IP stack.

elizabeth

elizabeth

i mean all you can do apparently is select edit and go from there

wtf is this man 🙂
it looks like the virtual san is already on so all you can do is like switch it to manual or something

ambiguous garbage only answer I can see working is
A

3utterfly

3utterfly

A : Select the Virtual SAN traffic option