Deleted Vmdk |verified| Access

Two seconds later, his phone rings. It’s the on-call developer.

The VM is still “running” in vCenter, but without its disk descriptor file, it can’t read any data. The operating system is frozen in a state of panic. deleted vmdk

Alex doesn’t panic (much). He remembers a rule his mentor taught him: Two seconds later, his phone rings

It’s 11:30 PM on a Friday. Alex is doing routine storage cleanup on the company’s VMware ESXi host. They have a legacy virtual machine named “Dev-Web-01” that was decommissioned months ago. He’s been asked to free up space on the datastore. The operating system is frozen in a state of panic

He looks back at the datastore browser. In his exhaustion, he’d been in the wrong folder. He hadn’t deleted the old dev disk. He’d deleted the production CRM’s primary .vmdk file while the VM was still running.

“Alex… did you just do something? The main customer database just went offline. Like, the entire CRM.”