VMware 5.0 Free to Hyper-V Checklist
Deathmage
Banned Posts: 2,496
Hey guys,
So tomorrow night I'm doing a conversion for a customer since they can't afford VMware licensing but have a 2012 R2 Enterprise license so were going the Hyper-V approach. It's not what I want to do but it's what we got....
so this is my steps process, if any one knows a better process let me know.
1) I have a Seagate 4 TB Ethernet NAS all setup with a lun mapping to a folder share with network configured for there LAN.
2) installed vSphere cleint on my work laptop.
3 ) initialize ISCSI initiator on my laptop to the NAS's IP address and connect to the folder share.
4) connect to the VMware 5.0 free server via the vSphere client.
5) navigate to the datastore and find the VM folder.
6) download the said folder to the folder share on the NAS.
(I'm doing the above process so I have a 1 to 1 copy of the VM folder on the NAS to convert from this to the Hyper-V server just in-case the conversion fucks up we still have a working esxi host, totally overkill but its a customers data so necessary)
7) go home and let it transfer the 750 MB VM folder to the NAS overnight.
rev up MVMC and point to the NAS's folder and move it to the Hyper-V server.
9) wait a few hours....
10) spin up the VM in the Hyper-v server and change the Netbios settings, networking config and just make sure things are working correctly.
Did I miss anything?
So tomorrow night I'm doing a conversion for a customer since they can't afford VMware licensing but have a 2012 R2 Enterprise license so were going the Hyper-V approach. It's not what I want to do but it's what we got....
so this is my steps process, if any one knows a better process let me know.
1) I have a Seagate 4 TB Ethernet NAS all setup with a lun mapping to a folder share with network configured for there LAN.
2) installed vSphere cleint on my work laptop.
3 ) initialize ISCSI initiator on my laptop to the NAS's IP address and connect to the folder share.
4) connect to the VMware 5.0 free server via the vSphere client.
5) navigate to the datastore and find the VM folder.
6) download the said folder to the folder share on the NAS.
(I'm doing the above process so I have a 1 to 1 copy of the VM folder on the NAS to convert from this to the Hyper-V server just in-case the conversion fucks up we still have a working esxi host, totally overkill but its a customers data so necessary)
7) go home and let it transfer the 750 MB VM folder to the NAS overnight.
rev up MVMC and point to the NAS's folder and move it to the Hyper-V server.
9) wait a few hours....
10) spin up the VM in the Hyper-v server and change the Netbios settings, networking config and just make sure things are working correctly.
Did I miss anything?
Comments
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iBrokeIT Member Posts: 1,318 ■■■■■■■■■□2019: GPEN | GCFE | GXPN | GICSP | CySA+
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lsud00d Member Posts: 1,571I did this with an ESX4.x cluster to SCVMM2012sp1. It was pretty simple--
How to Convert VMware Virtual Machines to Hyper-V
And I used the P2V process--
Migrating to Hyper-V VMs: Conversion tool options
Of note is uninstalling any antivirus and uninstalling VMware tools before the conversion.
Edit: I reread your original post and see you're going with MVMC, let me know how it goes! VMM makes it stupid simple -
Deathmage Banned Posts: 2,496I did this with an ESX4.x cluster to SCVMM2012sp1. It was pretty simple--
How to Convert VMware Virtual Machines to Hyper-V
And I used the P2V process--
Migrating to Hyper-V VMs: Conversion tool options
Of note is uninstalling any antivirus and uninstalling VMware tools before the conversion.
Edit: I reread your original post and see you're going with MVMC, let me know how it goes! VMM makes it stupid simple
thanks! -
Deathmage Banned Posts: 2,496Finding this conversion to be stupid simple.... and to think I did all this planning...
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lsud00d Member Posts: 1,571Awesome! Yeah, the way I converted (with VMM) was really simple too. Microsoft has really stepped their game up since Server 2008!!
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Deathmage Banned Posts: 2,496Awesome! Yeah, the way I converted (with VMM) was really simple too. Microsoft has really stepped their game up since Server 2008!!
The only problem I'm having is size.... lol!
I left the location at 9 pm since I setup jumbo frames on a vlan I made on the single gigabit switch at the location between my lenovo laptop, the Seagate NAS and the VMware 5.0 free server. the vmdk file is 2.5 GB's in size, even with the MTU set to 9216 across the board the transfer will take 16 hours even on a gigabit connection!!!!
other than that, painless...
will be heading back in the morning to do the vmdk to hyper-v conversion probably another 10 hours, lol!!! -
nman99 Member Posts: 35 ■■□□□□□□□□The only problem I'm having is size.... lol!
I left the location at 9 pm since I setup jumbo frames on a vlan I made on the single gigabit switch at the location between my lenovo laptop, the Seagate NAS and the VMware 5.0 free server. the vmdk file is 2.5 GB's in size, even with the MTU set to 9216 across the board the transfer will take 16 hours even on a gigabit connection!!!!
other than that, painless...
will be heading back in the morning to do the vmdk to hyper-v conversion probably another 10 hours, lol!!!
The gig connection has nothing to do with it because you will never come close to using all of it with the drive speeds that are in your devices. =] -
Deathmage Banned Posts: 2,496The gig connection has nothing to do with it because you will never come close to using all of it with the drive speeds that are in your devices. =]
Indeed as we found out, the whole process took like 28 hours. it wasn't the connection (or the switching fabric even at a mtu of 9214) it was the read speeds of the nas that was the bottleneck.... oo the thing you do to keep a customer afloat that doesn't want to pay for anything....