Recover Vmfs Metadata Official

Introduction VMware Virtual Machine File System (VMFS) is the backbone of vSphere environments, designed for high-performance concurrent access by multiple ESXi hosts. Despite its robustness, VMFS is not immune to corruption. Among the most dreaded scenarios for a storage administrator is the loss or corruption of VMFS metadata—the critical set of structures that tells the hypervisor where files (virtual disks, configurations, snapshots) reside on the underlying LUN or disk device.

# List all partitions on a device (e.g., naa.6000...) partedUtil get /vmfs/devices/disks/naa.6000... fdisk -l /vmfs/devices/disks/naa.6000... Attempt to probe filesystem vmfs-fs-probe /vmfs/devices/disks/naa.6000...:1 View kernel VMFS errors tail -100 /var/log/vmkernel.log | grep -i vmfs recover vmfs metadata

vmfs-fs-rescue /vmfs/devices/disks/naa.6000...:1 This creates a lost+found directory with recoverable files. It does not preserve original folder structure but may recover VMDK and VMX files. VMFS does not have an fsck like ext4. Instead, VMware relies on journal replay on mount. To force replay: Introduction VMware Virtual Machine File System (VMFS) is