An update. I got everything figured out now except.... the shared datastores are not showing up for it.
I have this compute esxi standard host imaged back with the correct HPE custom image, its in the same cluster as the 2 SimpliVity storage hosts
got all the vlans, kernel-nic, physical-nic, vswitches/tcp-ip stack set back up. Got the OVC IP/hostname set in the hosts file. got the advanced settings for the host in vcenter all done, the enable HPE simplivity datastore sharing checked for all the datastores, got the simplivity-esx-7.x-4.1.0.14 plugin installed. (did a reboot after)
I followed the steps from the HPE omnistack 4.2.0 vsphere admin guide. (starting at the esxi standard host section) and the 4.2.0 Vsphere Upgrade guide appendix D which goes over the plugin.
This re-imaged compute host was set back up with the exact same IP and same hostname as it was previously so I skipped the section on "Change the IP address on a standard ESXI host" Was i wrong in doing so? Wondering now if i still need to do this since at the end it mentions I should see a mounted datastore.
Procedure
1. If you do not need to add a new VMkernel NIC, skip to step 2. Complete this step if you need to add a new VMkernel NIC
with the new IP address:
a) Add the VMkernel NIC with the new IP address for the standard ESXi host.
b) Create NFS exports for the new VMkernel NIC using the svt-datastore-share command for each shared HPE SimpliVity
datastore.
c) Optional: Delete the original VMkernel NIC with the old IP address.
d) Run svt-datastore-share for each shared HPE SimpliVity datastore to confirm that the old IP address is no longer
valid and remove stale NFS exports for that NIC.
2. If you do not need to add a new VMkernel NIC, do these substeps to modify the vSwitch:
a) Change the IP address for the NIC.
b) Run svt-datastore-share for each shared HPE SimpliVity datastore to ensure that the system recognizes the new IP
address and removes the old IP address. This removes stale NFS exports and creates new NFS exports that use the
new IP.
3. Verify that the standard ESXi host can access the share by checking that the host mounted the datastore.
Standard ESXi