The following Churn can be observed from Diagnostic Snapshot:
---------- Begin Frequent Changes for Type VMWResourcePool ---------- Most volatile object: Test - New VMs Here (VMWResourcePool) Object uniqueId: 6d6c1654-c903-43e1-b9ea-f69949ca3aa1 Current version: 13907 Number of object updates in period: 1951 Number of versions in period: 281 Number of recent changes: 166 Num changes by property: cpuAllocationLimit: 63 memoryAllocationLimit: 100 virtualMachines: 3 Details of recent changes: +-------------------------+-----------------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Timestamp | Property | Change Type | Old Value | New Value | +-------------------------+-----------------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | 2016-12-09 23:09:12.803 | memoryAllocationLimit | Value Change | 10620020 | 10619994 | | 2016-12-09 23:04:14.459 | cpuAllocationLimit | Value Change | 1435324000000 | 1436134000000 | | 2016-12-09 23:04:14.459 | memoryAllocationLimit | Value Change | 10620072 | 10620020 | | 2016-12-09 22:59:02.865 | cpuAllocationLimit | Value Change | 1434514000000 | 1435324000000 |
Alternative Workaround:
1). Please run attached file "find-frequent-changes_VMWResourcePool_object.groovy" from Administration │ Tooling │ Script Console │ Script, and click on "Add" button.
2). Add to Object "VMware Resource Pool" to server.topology.objectExpiryDays, please KB SOL206989 in order to do it and set Stale Object clean up time.
3). Then go to Administration │Management Server │ Servers │ Object Clean up. Then check for Topology objects size for "VMware Resource Pool" and keep monitoring, Daily Maintenance will remove stale objects.
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