Quoted directly by Aaron from:
- Vcenter License Free
- Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License Lookup
- Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License Verification
Sometimes you need to run your ESXi server in evaluation mode for longer time then standard 60 days. It might be because of extensive testing or your project gets into the delays. Fortunately, there is a way how to reset the license back to day 0 without losing the configuration and existing virtual machines. In my last post we finished our VMware VCSA 6.5 installation. Before I teach you how to add an ESXi host to VMware vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) 6.5, I will explain the difference between adding a host to a datacenter object and to a cluster object.
Here's a one liner to reset the eval period: cp /etc/vmware/.#license.cfg /etc/vmware/license.cfg && /etc/init.d/vpxa restartDownload ESXi: http://mgnet.me/. Oct 15, 2017 Because even if you think that the product is free, it must be licensed.If not, it installs as 60 days trial, which expires after.60 days. Compared to other hypervisors, the free version of VMware hypervisor is somehow limited, because it does not offer vMotion, HA, Fault tolerance etc.
“This guide will give you the steps needed to reset the license file so that you can apply the evaluation license back to your ESXi host.
WARNING:This is for education/informational testing/development purposes only, and should not be used on a production server.
To reset your expired ESX 4.x, ESXi 4.x, ESXi 5.x or ESXi 6.x 60 day evaluation license:
![License License](/uploads/1/1/7/8/117856947/380299048.png)
- Login to the HOST via SSH or Shell
- Remove /etc/vmware/license.cfg
- Copy /etc/vmware/.#license.cfg to /etc/vmware/license.cfg
- Restart the vpxa service
Vcenter License Free
Or simply copy the code below and paste it into your SSH session.
Then open the “Licensed Features” option in the configuration tab of the ESXi host through the vSphere Client.
Click on “Edit” in the top right of the “Licensed Features” page
Once the “Assign License” window opens you will see two options. There will be a category for “Evaluation Mode” and Assigned License. Click on the “(No License Key)” option and then click “OK”. This will set the host back to “evaluation” mode and will give you access to all features for 60-days!”
I won’t go into intimate detail as it’s all poking around online, but I’ll give a run down of all the stupid things I ran into while trying to go from vCenter 5.5 on Windows 2008 R2 to a 6.5 appliance using the Appliance Migration Assistant and Appliance Installer.
- First issue, SSL certificates. The Migration Assistant began bitching about names and/or CA trust issues. I ultimately needed to use the SSL Certificate Automation Tool, a horrid batch file, to work through this, along with some openssl commands which saved quite a bit of time. Here’s what I ended up doing:
- Grab the SSL Certificate Automation Tool from vmware: https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/viewdocument.do?cmd=displayKC&docType=kc&externalId=2057340But don’t follow that article yet, it has a bunch of pointless stuff.
- Do yourself a favor and extract it at the root of C: with a simple directory name, because you’re going to be typing in and out of it a lot.
- Edit the environment variable file and pre-define all your paths; it’s ten times easier than trying to type them command line.
- Run the tool and generate new cert requests for vCenter, inventory service, web client as well as update manager now that the vCenter 6.5 migration tool includes update manager. I got these tips from this thread https://communities.vmware.com/thread/546223 where mbrkic has some excellent guidance, but I didn’t use his steps of creating the openssl.cnf as the automation tool will do that part for you.
- Next, instead of taking your certs to a CA, sign them yourself by going into each of the SSL Certificate Automation Tool’s requests* subdirectories which there will be four of, and running:”c:Program FilesVMwareInfrastructureInventory Servicebinopenssl.exe” req -nodes -new -x509 -keyout rui.key -out rui.crt -days 3650 -config csr_openssl.cnfThat will create each of your four certificates.
- After running the above, rename the resulting rui.crt to rui.pem
- Your SSL Certificate Automation Tool ssl-environment.bat file should reference the new certificates by their rui.pem names; make sure to get the paths correct since each of the four will be different.
- Use the SSL Cert Automation Tool to update each of the four certs; it will handle the install and restarting of services.
- You should be good to go now.
- Next issue, assistant is clear, you move on to appliance installer. Well, your VCSA target must be 6.0+ of ESXi. I was running my old vCenter on a free-license 5.5 host and it was just managing a cluster of enterprise plus hosts. I had to down all the VM’s and upgrade that vCenter host to 6.5 and then things were happy, or so I thought….
- Run the appliance installer again, I’m ready to run an attempt that will hopefully make it out of the starting gates. It runs, it gets stuck at “Installing RPM” at 80% and ultimately fails referencing some type of install timeout. This, it turns out, was the result of my trying to deploy the appliance to an ESXi host running a free license. The free licenses are missing relevant features, but the installer doesn’t test for that and warn you, it just wastes a few hours of your time and fails after a while. I found a website with steps to switch back to an eval license, which is fully featured, then you can switch back to your free license afterward:What the site didn’t make clear was that after removing the license.cfg and doing the rename, you need to get back into the fat client and actually pick the eval license radio button if you had previously been on a free license. So, I flip back to eval, run the installer for the third attempt and we’re past that issue to phase two.
- Finally, my first seemingly good attempt at using the installer / migration tool gets to phase two and dies with “error attempting backup spbm data”. There are hints this may be related to the SSL cert swap out from issue #1, but I couldn’t find anything to definitively point at that, and ultimately gave up and went ahead with an Inventory Service database reset as per VMware kb 2042200:https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/viewdocument.do?cmd=displayKC&docType=kc&externalId=2042200
Here’s a possible second cause of this with some info:http://notes.doodzzz.net/2015/03/24/vsphere-6-0-home-lab-upgrade-issues-faced/
https://communities.vmware.com/thread/505529 - Okay, inventory database is reset, I begin my fourth attempt at this. Think it will work? FUCK NO Nothing VMware produces outside of the hypervisor actually fucking works with any consistency, and when it fucks up, you better have a snapshot because it doesn’t just mildly fuck up, it goes North Korea nuclear style. The latest?Oh yeah, that’s a great error, who knows wtf that means. Well let’s delete my VCSA because even the installer, on the web interface, acknowledges something went wrong and it must be deleted and begun again. Yep, another three hours down the drain; wash, rinse, repeat. I found this post which references some of the error, and the recommendation was to ensure forward and reverse DNS entries are present for the temporary Windows machine you’re running the appliance installer / migration tool from: https://communities.vmware.com/thread/544755 Huh? FQDN and PTR for a temp machine which supposedly is just moving data? The docs don’t mention that. Well let me spend 30 seconds adding a DNS entry to see if it fixes what just wasted three fucking hours of my time VMware; great job guys.Also, if you’re running on an IPv6-enabled network, make sure to check the post about adding a localhost entry for your ::1 to the appliance before proceeding with step 2.
- Okay, bullshit DNS entries are in place, let’s start attempt number five and in three or four hours I’ll let you know if it worked….Nah:
So what are we at, perhaps 12 to 15 wasted hours now. I noticed this on the vCenter 5.5 server console though:I guess we need to investigate update manager as that would seem to indicate it has some relation to this latest failure. Found this page:
https://www.stephenwagner.com/?p=1115
same issues, suggests I need to:- Uninstall update manager
- Ensure I remove the temp files that the previous attempts have created as it will attempt to grab the data from archive each time.
- Reconnect the original server to the AD domain (non-issue in my case, running standalone)
- Start over again LOL Guess I’ll give attempt six a shot in the morning and let you know how it goes.
- Attempt six notes – it’s been sitting at “Starting vmware postgres” for a couple hours now. Not sure if it will finish but found this site telling me what to expect in the mean time:Woah, it completed! I had to stare at that for few hours but then it moved along.
- Finally, as described in the vmware blog: https://blogs.vmware.com/vsphere/2017/01/vcenter-server-appliance-6-5-migration-walkthrough.html it actually worked. I was able to move off crap MS Windows to VCSA, using far less cpu, far less mem, no more Windows updates and eliminating some license costs.
Of course, after all that, now I’m stuck no longer being able to use the reliable and easy thick/fat/C# client. I hate the web interface even more now that I’m forced to use it. Hell, just trying to find a browser that supports Flash properly these days is a challenge; ended up having to install FireFox on my Macs and my PC’s because Chrome is obviously a no-go, and Flash wouldn’t seem to work properly in Safari on Mac. IE/Edge on Win10 is supposed to have it built in but the built in version doesn’t seem compatible with vCenter.
Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License Lookup
![Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License](/uploads/1/1/7/8/117856947/587762997.png)
Reset Vcenter 6.5 Evaluation License Verification
VMware, get the fucking hint, we dont want a broken web interface, get rid of Flash, either make the html5 work properly, or let us use the fat client. Relying on flash means you’re stuck with this bullshit: