windows server 2008 R2 SP1 license (physical VS virtual)
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@IT-ADMIN said:
the budget will be for : 2 windows server license (2 VM) + 16 TB NAS
Two only because you want old versions?
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@LAH3385 said:
LOL!!! You are in exact same boat as me! But it took me 2 whole months to persuade them to go VMs. Nice job on that!.
There's a lot of thread on how to go visualization and different between each hypervisor.As SAM has mentioned before in other thread Do you homework before purchasing hardware! Don't make the same mistake I did.
yes off course now that i have the budget i will learn what is the optimal way to go before doing anything
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What is the NAS for?
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@IT-ADMIN said:
@scottalanmiller said:
What is the NAS for?
NAS for storing daily VM backup
Cool, sounds good then. 16TB is a LOT of backups!
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i learn something is that the best time to ask for a budget is the time of disaster,
because while everything is runing fine, you will not take easily a budget from the management -
Also a good time to talk to management about this problem - explain that now they understand the importance of good IT. They need to figure out how to remind themselves that IT matters once you get things fixed so that they don't forget and slip back into old patterns.
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yeah sure,
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so the project will be like this :
i have 2 dell poweredge T310, i will take one of them, then P2V, take the V in external storage, then format the server, install XenServer on it, host 2 VM in it (one VM for DC and File Server and the second VM for Application Server)
the problem now is that i cannot buy anymore windows server 2008 R2 key,
i need this key to activate the VM, because after i deploy the VM (that i P2V previously it will ask me for the key and me do not have the key) -
if i put the server 2012 key on my windows server 2008, is it ok or not ??
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@IT-ADMIN You will have to have a 2008 key, if you have a VL of 2012 you should have access to a 2008 key as well.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
if i put the server 2012 key on my windows server 2008, is it ok or not ??
Depends how you buy the licenses. But yes, that's the point. You buy current correctly and get downgrade rights so that you can run the version that you need but are licensed to stay current when the time comes.
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ok what about upgrading my preexisting 2008 R2 to 2012 R2 without losing my current configuration?? is it possible ??
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@IT-ADMIN said:
ok what about upgrading my preexisting 2008 R2 to 2012 R2 without losing my current configuration?? is it possible ??
Yes, you can do in place upgrades in most cases. Rarely recommended, clean installs are better, especially for servers. But technically it can be done.