4.0.1
Table Of Contents
- User's Guide
- Contents
- Updated Information
- About This Book
- Introduction
- Migration with Converter Standalone
- Converter Standalone Components
- Converter Standalone Features
- System Requirements
- Supported Operating Systems
- Installation Space Requirements
- Supported Source Types
- Supported Destination Types
- Restoring VCB Images in Converter Standalone
- How Conversion Affects the Source Settings When They Are Applied to the Destination
- Changes That Conversion Causes to Virtual Hardware
- TCP/IP Port Requirements for Conversion
- Common Requirements for Remote Hot Cloning of Windows Operating Systems
- Installing and Uninstalling VMware vCenter Converter Standalone
- Install Converter Standalone in Windows
- Uninstall, Modify, or Repair Converter Standalone in Windows
- Perform a Command-Line Installation in Windows
- Command-Line Options for Windows Installation
- Perform a Local Installation in Linux
- Perform a Client-Server Installation in Linux
- Uninstall Converter Standalone in Linux
- Modify or Repair Converter Standalone in Linux
- Connect to a Remote Converter Standalone Server
- Converting Machines
- Convert a Machine
- Start the Wizard for a Conversion
- Select a Source to Convert
- Select a Destination for the New Virtual Machine
- View Setup Options for a New Virtual Machine
- Select the Destination Folder
- Organizing the Data to Copy to the Destination Machine
- Distribute Disks over Several Datastores
- Distribute Volumes over Several Datastores
- Create or Delete a Target Disk
- Move a Source Volume to a Target Virtual Disk
- Modify the Settings in the Source Volumes List
- Change the Target Datastore for a Destination Virtual Disk
- Create a Thin Provisioned Disk
- Create a Linked Clone
- Change Device Settings on the New Virtual Machine
- Change Network Connections on the Destination
- Control the Status of Windows Services During Conversion
- Advanced Customization Options
- Synchronize the Source with the Destination Machine
- Adjust the Post-Conversion Power State
- Install VMware Tools
- Customize the Guest Operating System
- Edit the Destination Computer Information
- Enter the Windows License Information
- Set the Time Zone
- Set Up the Network Adapters
- Assign a Workgroup or Domain Details
- Remove System Restore Checkpoints
- Set Up the Network for the Helper Virtual Machine
- Customize a VMware Infrastructure Virtual Machine
- Customize a Standalone or Workstation Virtual Machine
- Customize a Virtual Appliance
- Configure the Product Properties of an Exported Virtual Appliance
- View the Summary of a Conversion Task
- Convert a Machine
- Configuring VMware Virtual Machines
- Configure a Virtual Machine
- Save Sysprep Files
- Select a Source to Configure
- Select the Options to Configure
- Customize a Virtual Machine’s Guest Operating System
- Edit the Computer Information of a Configured Virtual Machine
- Enter the Windows License Information of a Configured Virtual Machine
- Set the Time Zone of a Configured Virtual Machine
- Set Up the Network Adapters of a Configured Virtual Machine
- Assign a Workgroup or Domain Details of a Configured Virtual Machine
- View the Summary of a Configuration Task
- Configure a Virtual Machine
- Managing Conversion and Configuration Tasks
- Glossary
- Index
Table 2-6. Supported Destinations
Destination Type Supported Versions
VMware Infrastructure virtual machine Managed destinations
n
ESX 3.x and 4.0
n
ESXi 3.x and 4.0 Installable and ESXi 3.x and 4.0
Embedded
n
vCenter Server 2.x and 4.0
VMware virtual machines Hosted destinations
n
VMware Workstation 5.x, 6.0.x, and 6.5.x
n
VMware Fusion 1.x and 2.x
n
VMware ACE 2.0.x and VMware ACE 2.5.x
n
VMware Player 1.x, 2.0.x, and 2.5.x
n
VMware Server 1.x and 2.x
OVF and OVA virtual appliances
n
OVF spec version 1.0
n
Local .ovf or .ova file
NOTE For hosted destinations that reside on SMB or NFS shares, you must use volume-based cloning and
create 2GB disks that are not preallocated.
Restoring VCB Images in Converter Standalone
VMware Consolidated Backup enables you to back up all of the virtual machines of an entire ESX server. The
backup is stored by using Workstation disks, a .vmx file, and a catalog file. Converter Standalone can restore
VCB images to ESX server hosts and convert them to VMware standalone virtual machines.
When it runs on Windows hosts, Converter Standalone supports restoring VCB images of the source operating
systems described in Table 2-1.
The virtual machine conversion limitations for Windows hosts described in Table 2-5 also apply when restoring
VCB images. Restoring VCB images from Linux host operating systems is not supported.
Converter Standalone does not maintain the .nvram file, nor the VMware log files.
Converter Standalone does not read the original location settings from the catalog file. To restore to the same
location, find information such as datastore, host name, folder name, and resource pool in the catalog file and
enter it in the Conversion wizard. In addition, Converter Standalone does not read the original display name
from the catalog file. To use the same name and if you do not remember it, look it up in the catalog file. You
can read the catalog file as a plain text file.
Information Not Preserved When Using Converter Standalone for Managed
Product Destinations
When you restore VCB images for managed product destinations (ESX server hosts, for example), Converter
Standalone does not preserve certain hardware backing information from the original image, but rather
substitutes default settings.
Table 2-7 shows which areas are affected.
Table 2-7. Changes to Hardware Information Because of Conversion
Affected Area Behavior
CD-ROM Defaults to device type: client device.
Floppy Defaults to device type: client device.
Network adapters Defaults to the list of network adapters in the GUI. The MAC address is not preserved. The destination
host regenerates the MAC address.
User's Guide
24 VMware, Inc.