--- title: "Removing and Recreating vCLS VMs" # Title of the blog post. date: 2022-07-23T16:25:05-05:00 # Date of post creation. # lastmod: 2022-07-23T16:25:05-05:00 # Date when last modified description: "How to remove and (optionally) recreate the vSphere Clustering Services VMs" # Description used for search engine. featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar. draft: true # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered. toc: true # Controls if a table of contents should be generated for first-level links automatically. usePageBundles: true # menu: main # featureImage: "file.png" # Sets featured image on blog post. # featureImageAlt: 'Description of image' # Alternative text for featured image. # featureImageCap: 'This is the featured image.' # Caption (optional). # thumbnail: "thumbnail.png" # Sets thumbnail image appearing inside card on homepage. # shareImage: "share.png" # Designate a separate image for social media sharing. codeLineNumbers: false # Override global value for showing of line numbers within code block. series: Tips # Projects, Scripts, vRA8 tags: - vmware - vsphere comment: true # Disable comment if false. --- Way back in 2020, VMware released vSphere 7 Update 1 and introduced the new [vSphere Clustering Services (vCLS)](https://core.vmware.com/resource/introduction-vsphere-clustering-service-vcls) to improve how cluster services like the Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS) operate. vCLS deploys lightweight agent VMs directly on the cluster being managed, and those VMs provide a decoupled and distributed control plane to offload some of the management responsibilities from the vCenter server. ![vCLS VM](vcls-vm.png) That's very cool, particularly in large continent-spanning environments or those which reach into multiple clouds, but it may not make sense to add those additional workloads in resource-constrained homelabs. And while the vCLS VMs are supposed to be automagically self-managed, sometimes things go a little wonky and that management fails to function correctly, which can negatively impact DRS. Recovering from such a scenario is complicated by the complete inability to manage the vCLS VMs through the vSphere UI. Fortunately there's a somewhat-hidden way to disable (and re-enable) vCLS on a per-cluster basis, and it's easy to do once you know the trick. This can help if you want to permanently disable vCLS (like in a lab environment) or if you just need to turn it off and on again[^off-and-on] to clean up and redeploy uncooperative agent VMs. [^off-and-on]: ![](off-and-on.gif) ### Find the cluster's domain ID It starts with determining the affected cluster's domain ID, which is very easy to do once you know where to look.