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Cannot delete iso file
Cannot delete iso file






Rm: cannot remove ‘install.jar’: Permission deniedĪnd as root: /home/joshuajoseph/virtual-drives/1/java/jar# rm install.jarĬan't even change permissions: /home/joshuajoseph/virtual-drives/1/java/jar# chmod 777 /home/joshuajoseph/virtual-drives/1/java/jar/Ĭhmod: cannot access ‘/home/joshuajoseph/virtual-drives/1/java/jar/’: Permission denied So when I go through sudo: ~/virtual-drives/1/java/jar$ sudo rm install.jar Rm: cannot remove ‘install.jar’: Function not implemented jar file in there with another, yet NOTHING I do will give me permission to do so! ~/virtual-drives/1/java/jar$ rm install.jar I downloaded a file using a torrent, and basically I need to replace a. Hope this will help you out if you’re facing the same issue.I understand similar questions have been asked but truthfully none answer my question. The vCenter was then back online and running like nothing happened and I was finally able to configure VCHA with a passive node waiting to go online (hopefully it’ll never have to) and a witness VM to monitor the whole thing. I just had to answer “Yes” once I got the pop-up below and then I was good to go. The VM was still running and I was able this time to remove the dvd drive once and for all. Then I tried again multiple times to un-mount the ISO but things started to get worse as the vCenter got unresponsive for about 5 minutes and I couldn’t even ping it.įortunately I remembered on which ESXi host the vCenter was running and got connected to it to see what was happening. So I tried to ssh the vCenter and unlock the ISO but apparently linux commands don’t work on Photon OS like I expected.

cannot delete iso file

I was almost done with the configuration of VCHA but got stuck because of the ISO file mounted to the vCenter VM, and of course I couldn’t just un-mount the ISO from the vSphere Web Client. I won’t go into further details as this is not the topic today.

cannot delete iso file

The thing is that I didn’t immediately un-mount the ISO file and remove the dvd drive from the vCenter VM after the upgrade and a few days later I had to configure VCHA (vCenter High Availability) which allow to have a passive vCenter to go online in case of failure of the active node. Everything went just fine and my VCSA was up to date and running after a couple of minutes and a reboot. This is why I needed to add a dvd drive to the vCenter VM and then mount the VCSA update ISO file. Well, I recently had to upgrade a vCenter Server Appliance (VCSA) from version 6.5 to 6.5 U1e for a customer by using the offline bundle rather than the online method. You might be wondering why the need to add a dvd drive to a VM running vCenter in the first place.








Cannot delete iso file