5.1

Table Of Contents
Supported Destination Disk Types
Depending on the destination you select, several destination disk types are available.
Table 2-6. Destination Disk Types
Destination Available Disk Types
VMware vSphere virtual machine
Thick
Copies the entire source disk size to the
destination, regardless of its used and
free space.
Thin
For managed destinations that support
thin provisioning through GUI, creates
an expanding disk on the destination.
For example, if the source disk size is
10GB, but only 3GB is used, the created
destination disk is 3GB but can expand
to 10GB.
VMware Workstation or other VMware virtual machine
Pre-
allocated
Copies the entire source disk size to the
destination, regardless of its used and
free space.
Not pre-
allocated
Creates an expanding disk on the
destination. For example, if the source
disk size is 20GB, but only 5GB is used,
the created destination disk is 5GB but
can expand to 20GB. Take this expansion
into account when you calculate the free
disk space on the destination datastore.
2GB Split
pre-
allocated
Splits the source disk into 2GB sections
on the destination.
2GB Split not
pre-
allocated
Creates 2GB sections on the destination
that include only the real used space on
the source disk. As the destination disk
grows, new 2GB sections are created to
accommodate the new data until the size
reaches that of the original source disk.
To support destination virtual disks on FAT file systems, divide the source data into 2GB files.
Support for IPv6 in Converter Standalone
Converter Standalone supports both IPv4 and IPv6 Internet protocols with several limitations.
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6 or IPng) is the successor to Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4), which is the
currently used protocol for assigning IP addresses to computers on the Internet. IPv6 was adopted to overcome
the expected exhaustion of IPv4 addresses that might be caused by the constantly increasing number of
computers on the Internet.
While IPv4 uses 32bit addresses, IPv6 uses 128bit. IPv6 addresses can have different formats or notations.
n
1040:0:0:0:0:0:0:1
n
1040::1
n
21DA:00D3:0010:2F3B:02AA:00FF:FE28:9C5A
n
[2001:0db8:85a3:08d3:1319:8a2e:0370:7344]:443
VMware vCenter Converter Standalone User's Guide
22 VMware, Inc.