To find which hosts certificate was expired or custom, I used the a script from William Lam that can be found thru this blog: Is vCenter Server & ESXi hosts using VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA) or custom CA certificates? The hosts that was add, when the vCenter was using “thumprint” instead of “vmca” was using a custom certificate that the vmware-sps service could validate, so the also filled up the log file. The result of the script looked like this. To fix the problem I just did a “Renew Certificate” and “Refresh CA Certticates”, on all the hosts with expired and “custom” certificates. vCenter Server 5.x requires a 64-bit ( Supported host operating systems for VMware vCenter Server).Microsoft Windows Installer version 4.5 (MSI 4.5) is required on your system.Supported databases ( VMware Product Interoperability Matrixes).Intel or AMD 圆4 processor with two or more logical cores, each with a speed of 2 GHz.12 GB Memory requirements are higher if the vCenter Server database runs on the same machine as vCenter Server.40-60 GB of free disk space is required after the installation, depending on the size of your inventory.clear vmware update manager logs This log file can be found on the vCenter Server (and not the local PC from which you may be running the vSphere Client. You should provide more space to allow for future growth of your inventory.
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