Hello I want to know how I could plug in a SATA drive into a standard Windows 7 PC and read (and write perfered too) a VMFS ESXi 5.5 created partition/HDD in Windows 7. Thank you
Hi
Depending on why you're trying to do this, there are a couple of ways to go about it. The quick and dirty way is to use the open source VMFS driver found here: https://code.google.com/p/vmfs/ Its a little bit funky, you use WebDAV to export the contents vs. a drive letter. The downside is it only supports VMFS3 and its read-only. Or at least that was the status last time I messed with it.
My preferred way is to run ESXi inside a Fusion or Workstation VM on your laptop, pass the HD through to it (kinda like doing an RDM in ESXi, but manually creating the pointer), and export the /vmfs/volumes/<datastorename> directory in NFS or SAMBA running inside the ESXi VM. Takes more effort to set up initially, but you also get write access and VMFS5 this way.
Thanks
Sean
Yup, I already saw this but like you metnioned it supports v3 only and is only read. That workaround is too much work for plug and play. I need something like that open driver where I plug in the drive, install the drivers and I can AT LEAST read off the drive.
I don't think anything like this exists unfortunately. I'd be just as interested.
Out of curiosity, what is the use case?
There is also "vmfs-tools" project, and it supports vmfs5 too. I did not try it personally, but it should be able to compile vmfs-tools even on cygwin (unix-line environment on Windows):
http://glandium.org/projects/vmfs-tools/
Hi Sean,
I do not really understand how this setup is supposed to work. Can you please explain how you run an NFS or Samba server inside ESXi?
Thanks
Andreas
Build a statically linked samba binary. Disable support for windbind/ldap/ad/cups/etc to eliminate dependencies.
The purpose would be to use it as a multipurpose drive...