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Working with Snapshots on the ESXi CLI

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Recently, I had the need to remove some snapshots from a virtual machine using the CLI as there were issues with network connectivity. The CLI tool to do this is vim-cmd. It’s not something you have to use regularly, generally speaking, so I thought I’d do a quick post on how you can use it in relation to virtual machine snapshots. To start with you can use the tool to list the virtual machines registered on the host by running:

~ # vim-cmd vmsvc/getallvms
Vmid   Name             File                   Guest OS          Version   
10     XP3    [datastore1] XP3/XP3.vmx   windows7Server64Guest   vmx-08
11     XP4    [datastore1] XP4/XP4.vmx   windows7Server64Guest   vmx-08
8      XP     [datastore1] XP/XP.vmx     otherGuest              vmx-08
9      XP2    [datastore1] XP2/XP2.vmx   otherGuest              vmx-08

The snapshot related commands that the vmsvc/ namespace has available are:

  • snapshot.create
  • snapshot.dumpoption
  • snapshot.get
  • snapshot.remove
  • snapshot.removeall
  • snapshot.revert
  • snapshot.setoption
  • get.snapshotinfo

The virtual machine I am going to work with in this example is XP3, which has 10 as its VMID. From now on we will be using the VMID when running any commands against the virtual machine.

As it stands, this virtual machine has no snapshots. We can check by using the snapshot.get command, which won’t return any result. We can also keep an eye on the virtual machine’s work directory by using either just a directory listing or by using the watch command, for example –  watch -d ‘ls -luth | grep -E “delta|flat”‘ :

-rw-------    1 root     root         5.0G Aug 11 05:15 XP3-flat.vmdk

At the moment, there is just the -flat file, showing that there are no snapshots. We can take a snapshot by running:

~ # vim-cmd vmsvc/snapshot.create 10 test
Create Snapshot:

The two options we have added to the snapshot.create command are the vmid and ‘test’ which is the name of the snapshot. We can create another, giving it a different name:

~ # vim-cmd vmsvc/snapshot.create 10 test2
Create Snapshot:

Checking the VMs directory we can now see:

-rw-------    1 root     root        12.0k Aug 11 05:46 XP3-000002-delta.vmdk
-rw-------    1 root     root        12.0k Aug 11 05:44 XP3-000001-delta.vmdk
-rw-------    1 root     root         5.0G Aug 11 05:15 XP3-flat.vmdk

We can also view the snapshot chain by running:

~ # vim-cmd vmsvc/snapshot.get 10
Get Snapshot:
|-ROOT
--Snapshot Name        : test
--Snapshot Desciption  :
--Snapshot Created On  : 8/11/2012 5:44:22
--Snapshot State       : powered off
--|-CHILD
----Snapshot Name        : test2
----Snapshot Desciption  :
----Snapshot Created On  : 8/11/2012 5:45:35
----Snapshot State       : powered off

You can also see the snapshot chain by looking at the contents of the xp3.vmsd file:

/vmfs/volumes/4f27b82e-3fc1540e-bf6b-000c295da2d9/XP3 # cat XP3.vmsd
.encoding = "UTF-8"
snapshot.lastUID = "12"
snapshot.current = "12"
snapshot0.uid = "11"
snapshot0.filename = "XP3-Snapshot11.vmsn"
snapshot0.displayName = "test"
snapshot0.createTimeHigh = "313078"
snapshot0.createTimeLow = "-203345443"
snapshot0.numDisks = "1"
snapshot0.disk0.fileName = "XP3.vmdk"
snapshot0.disk0.node = "scsi0:0"
snapshot1.uid = "12"
snapshot1.filename = "XP3-Snapshot12.vmsn"
snapshot1.parent = "11"
snapshot1.displayName = "test2"
snapshot1.description = ""
snapshot1.createTimeHigh = "313078"
snapshot1.createTimeLow = "-130379567"
snapshot1.numDisks = "1"
snapshot1.disk0.fileName = "XP3-000001.vmdk"
snapshot1.disk0.node = "scsi0:0"
snapshot.numSnapshots = "2"

To remove a snapshot you can use the snapshot.remove command, which will remove the most recent snapshot in the chain, or the snapshot.removeall command:

~ # vim-cmd vmsvc/snapshot.removeall 10
Remove Snapshot:

There are a few other options available, as listed above, but hopefully this has given a feel for how to interact with snapshots using vim-cmd.

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