5.1

Table Of Contents
Conversion Limitations 3
When you are aware of the conversion limitations of Converter Standalone, you might be able to avoid
conversion and post-conversion problems, and handle them more easily.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Conversion Limitations for Powered On Machines,” on page 29
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“Conversion Limitations for VMware Virtual Machines,” on page 29
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“Conversion Limitations for Third-Party Virtual Machines or System Images,” on page 30
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“Limitations Related to Creating Snapshots of Windows Sources,” on page 30
Conversion Limitations for Powered On Machines
When you convert a powered on machine, some conversion features might not be available for certain source
operating systems.
Table 3-1. Limitations for Powered On Machine Conversion
Source Operating System Limitations
Windows XP and later
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When you convert UEFI sources, Converter Standalone does not copy any UEFI
variables to the destination.
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Synchronization is supported only for volume-based cloning at the block level.
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Scheduling synchronization is supported only for managed destinations that are ESX
4.0 or later.
Linux
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Only volume-based cloning at the file level is supported.
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Only managed destinations are supported.
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Converting multiboot virtual machines is supported only if GRUB is installed as the
boot loader. LILO is not supported.
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When you convert UEFI sources, Converter Standalone copies only the current UEFI
boot entry option to the destination.
Conversion Limitations for VMware Virtual Machines
Certain limitations exist when you convert a VMware virtual machine.
You must power off source virtual machines before you convert them. You can convert running virtual
machines if you follow the procedure for converting powered on machines.
For volume-based conversions of virtual machine sources that run Windows 8 or Windows Server 2012,
Converter Standalone does not preserve storage pools on the destination.
For volume-based conversions of UEFI sources, Converter Standalone does not preserve the UEFI settings.
The UEFI settings are preserved during disk-based conversions.
VMware, Inc.
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