When removing a VMFS, is it safe to remove the .dvsData folder and subfolders?
search cancel

When removing a VMFS, is it safe to remove the .dvsData folder and subfolders?

book

Article ID: 302872

calendar_today

Updated On:

Products

VMware vSphere ESXi

Issue/Introduction

Symptoms:
When removing a VMFS volume, is it safe to remove the .dvsData folder and subfolders?

Resolution

The .dvsData folder and the subfolder are primarily used for VMware High Availability (HA) when working with a vNetwork Distributed Switch (vDS).

When the virtual machine is using a dvport on the vDS, the ESX/ESXi host periodically syncs the port state into a file in a .dvsData subfolder on the same datastore on which the virtual machine resides (that is, where the .vmx file is located). When a VMware HA event occurs and the virtual machine tries to power on a different ESX host, the destination host reads the dvPort state from that subfolder and starts the virtual machine on that datastore.

When performing VMFS maintenance, ensure that no virtual machines on this datastore are registered in vCenter. After you do this, you can safely remove the .dvsData folder and subfolders.