P2V Windows 2008 R2
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
The issue with this is the same issue as was discussed yesterday. The underlying storage that the VM is looking for is the RAID array. That is why the devices have the cciss.
If you can convert the disk to a NTFS disk for example, then you'd have no issues booting the VM.
What? I already have a VM with VDI attached, and I can attach these VDIs to another VM and access the boot partition and the data partitions with no issues - and those are all NTFS inside the VDI, so I have no idea what you're talking about.
How you can do this inside of XenServer... change the underlying hardware (when the server its self sees is asking for the wrong hardware)
I see two possible solutions to my problem
- from within the VM change the boot device from what it expects (the HP P400 RAID controller) to a SATA controller
- from within the XS VM properties - make the VM think it has a RAID controller/SAS disk, not SATA to boot from. I know ESXi can do this, basically lie to the VM and claim that the storage controller is an LSI RAID controller, I don't know how to do this in XS.
I know that option 1 is the typical way this is solved - but I can't figure out how or what to change either in the registry or filewise inside the VM to make it skip knowing/caring about the RAID controller it once knew about.
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@dafyre said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
How about a repair install? Would that bork all your programs and settings?
As in install over the top? I really don't want to do that either. I'd try xenconvert before I'd do that.
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Why can't you create a new VM and import the data from the array over to it?
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
Why can't you create a new VM and import the data from the array over to it?
Because they are application servers - ones I don't have settings for.
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Or an alternative option would be to create a new VM and attach the disks that contain the storage to it from there.
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So the C drive contains the applications that they host.
hrm...
I'd try a different conversion tool,
which tool did you use to create this VM?you said you used clonezilla to create a VM of these.Try a different tool. Like Vmwares Standalone Converter. You install it on your system, target the IP of the remote physical, and convert it. Giving it a storage target.
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I am telling you what has worked in my experience. Last year I converted 20 something vms doing what i suggested with xenconvert on xs 6.5. Most of these were on HW raid and i successfully converted every single one, form win2k up to server 2012.
Honestly just try using the tool with xs7 it probably just works. and the servers can still be used while the conversion is happening. -
@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
So the C drive contains the applications that they host.
hrm...
I'd try a different conversion tool, which tool did you use to create this VM?
@Dashrender said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
I use Clonezilla and after going through several versions I find a version ...
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
Try a different tool. Like Vmwares Standalone Converter. You install it on your system, target the IP of the remote physical, and convert it. Giving it a storage target.
That will export into XS? As I mentioned in my OP, I don't have space on my ESXi host for this, so i can't import it there.
Plus I already said I wanted to avoid the convert/convert game.
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@Dashrender said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
Try a different tool. Like Vmwares Standalone Converter. You install it on your system, target the IP of the remote physical, and convert it. Giving it a storage target.
That will export into XS? As I mentioned in my OP, I don't have space on my ESXi host for this, so i can't import it there.
Plus I already said I wanted to avoid the convert/convert game.
With the converter you just export it to a VHD file. The VHD file can be imported into XenServer using XenCenter (XO doesn't support VHD)
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@momurda said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
I am telling you what has worked in my experience. Last year I converted 20 something vms doing what i suggested with xenconvert on xs 6.5. Most of these were on HW raid and i successfully converted every single one, form win2k up to server 2012.
Honestly just try using the tool with xs7 it probably just works. and the servers can still be used while the conversion is happening.Yeah OK now I need to find a machine that has 1 TB of scratch space for the export to be sent to. I don't have it currently.
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@Dashrender Cant you just use an external usb drive?
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@Dashrender said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
Try a different tool. Like Vmwares Standalone Converter. You install it on your system, target the IP of the remote physical, and convert it. Giving it a storage target.
That will export into XS? As I mentioned in my OP, I don't have space on my ESXi host for this, so i can't import it there.
Plus I already said I wanted to avoid the convert/convert game.
With the converter you just export it to a VHD file. The VHD file can be imported into XenServer using XenCenter (XO doesn't support VHD)
and I'm back to having a scratch space problem.
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
The issue with this is the same issue as was discussed yesterday. The underlying storage that the VM is looking for is the RAID array. That is why the devices have the cciss.
If you can convert the disk to a NTFS disk for example, then you'd have no issues booting the VM.
How you can do this inside of XenServer... change the underlying hardware (when the server its self sees is asking for the wrong hardware)
FFS, WTF are you talking about? He knows the old device is not longer there and he needs to tell windows to stop using it.
The vdisks are perfectly accessible, simply windows needs fixed.
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@momurda said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@Dashrender Cant you just use an external usb drive?
Well that will take forever... I'd honestly just dig up 6 old hard drives that are the same, and create a temp file server.
For something not critical use freenas.
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@JaredBusch said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
The issue with this is the same issue as was discussed yesterday. The underlying storage that the VM is looking for is the RAID array. That is why the devices have the cciss.
If you can convert the disk to a NTFS disk for example, then you'd have no issues booting the VM.
How you can do this inside of XenServer... change the underlying hardware (when the server its self sees is asking for the wrong hardware)
FFS, WTF are you talking about? He knows the old device is not longer there and he needs to tell windows to stop using it.
The vdisks are perfectly accessible, simply windows needs fixed.
Ok dipstick, how do you fix it? I clearly said I wasn't aware of how to do this. So provide some help rather than being a touchy P**k
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@Dashrender why didn't you use the normal Windows backup utility built into Server 2008?
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@JaredBusch said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@Dashrender why didn't you use the normal Windows backup utility built into Server 2008?
He'd still be in the same situation with the OS looking for the array.
Windows backup doesn't abstract that information away.
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@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@JaredBusch said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
@DustinB3403 said in P2V Windows 2008 R2:
The issue with this is the same issue as was discussed yesterday. The underlying storage that the VM is looking for is the RAID array. That is why the devices have the cciss.
If you can convert the disk to a NTFS disk for example, then you'd have no issues booting the VM.
How you can do this inside of XenServer... change the underlying hardware (when the server its self sees is asking for the wrong hardware)
FFS, WTF are you talking about? He knows the old device is not longer there and he needs to tell windows to stop using it.
The vdisks are perfectly accessible, simply windows needs fixed.
Ok dipstick, how do you fix it? I clearly said I wasn't aware of how to do this. So provide some help rather than being a touchy P**k
Not sure, because I would not have done anything the way he did.
But, I do know that you are talking out your ass.