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Unable to mount any NFS datastore: Unable to resolve hostname ''

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Hi,

 

On a particular ESXi server, whenever I try to mount any NFS datastore, I get this error message:

 

Call "HostDatastoreSystem.CreateNasDatastore" for object "ha-datastoresystem" on ESXi "172.22.216.64" failed.
Operation failed, diagnostics report: Unable to resolve hostname 'cosmo'

 

Always mentioning hostname 'cosmo', regardless of what server I'm actually trying to mount from. 172.22.216.64 is the correct address of the ESXi server.

 

'cosmo' was the old name of a linux desktop machine, that many months ago got re-installed and renamed in the process. So 'cosmo' does not exist any more and it is fair and expected that 'cosmo' cannot be resolved. However, the error message mentioning 'cosmo' occurs regardless of what server I try to mount an NFS datastore from. I cannot find any references to 'cosmo' in the ESXi server's configuration in the vSphere client (although I'm not sure where to look exactly). I seem to remember that at some point, a NFS datastore was mounted temporarily from 'cosmo' to host debugging ISO files. But no longer.

 

I've tried mounting that same export on another ESXi (running same ESXi version) in the same subnet (works fine), and I've also tried mounting a new NFS share from a server where the ESXi already had another NFS datastore mounted from that same server (the already-mounted datastore works fine, but attempting to connect to a new datastore on the same server fails mentioning the unrelated 'cosmo' server as mentioned above.) I've tried rebooting the ESXi server, but the problem persists after reboot.

 

I'm running vSphere client 5.0.0 Build 455964 and ESXi-5.0.0-469512-standard with the free license. Because of the free license (I think), I don't have SSH access to the server. (Is that right?)

 

How do I get around the error message mentioning the obsolete 'cosmo' server? The only thing I can think of right now is to move all the local datastore data to an already-mounted datastore, reinstall the ESXi server, and move all the data back. I'm hoping for a simpler solution! :-)

 

Peter


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