Proxmox "VMware import wizard"
Most of you are probably aware, but as a heads-up for those who missed it: Proxmox introduced an import wizard for ESXi.
Any experiences? I'm not so fond of commercial software, so never gave VMware a spin and thus lack any testcase.
edit: I managed to botch the poll, have some patience with me....
Escape routes
- Did you migrate away from VMware?12 votes
- No, should I?  0.00%
- Yes, I did. I manually migrated my VM from VMware to Proxmox.41.67%
- Yes... went back to bare metal.  0.00%
- Other, see thread below25.00%
- What's a VM?33.33%
Thanked by (1)Falzo
Comments
We are moving from VMware to Virtualizor.
That option that proxmox has released looks interesting, but I haven't done any testing with it.
George Datacenter LLC
www.georgedatacenter.com
Owner Hardware
Are you sure you want to move to Virtualizor?
Free NAT KVM | Free NAT LXC | Bobr
ITS WEDNESDAY MY DUDES
The old nodes we have in VMware are already a headache, for now if it is the closest option we have.
George Datacenter LLC
www.georgedatacenter.com
Owner Hardware
I wrote a bash script for that purpose a few months ago. Nice to see an integrated solution now, but have to read up on it, if and how it might handle IP remapping and such.
Backup your data, scrap the VM and set it up anew in proxmox. You'll lose all the fat and none of the data.
Websites have ads, I have ad-blocker.
(courtesy of @somik)
This wasn't sarcasm though. It is a real advice I always follow. When it's time to change server, I always backup, wipe, reinstall proxmox, setup VM, and copy back all my data.
Websites have ads, I have ad-blocker.
Hy @wankel
Before folowing our recomandation, take your time and read:
https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Migrate_to_Proxmox_VE
Migration from VMware to proxmox is pretty simple, this is option A:
1- do a backup of the VM in VMware , so if shit hits the fan, you won’t loose it
2- after the backup uninstall VMware guest agent, now this step is a must, and install QEMU-GUEST-AGENT
3- create the vm in proxmox node, same specs, emulation Q35 not FX440, disk type SATA for windows VM, SCSI for Linux and if you run centos 7 you have to use IDE
4- copy the VM drive file from VMware to proxmox, put in in /mnt/pve/tmp for example
5- ssh to proxmox and run :
qm disk import {target VMID} {vmdk file} {target storage}, for example
qm disk import 102 windows10.vmdk local-lvme
6 - go to GUI, and you will see an un-allocated disk image, atach it ( scsi, sata, ide )
Boot, now 80% of the cases this works, if not,
Option B: ( this worked best on sub windows 10 VM's and centos 7 )
This step requires that you have a 'lan' connection between proxmox and vmware!
1- do a backup of the VM in VMware , so if shit hits the fan, you won’t loose it
2- after the backup uninstall VMware guest agent, now this step is a must, and install QEMU-GUEST-AGENT
3- create the vm in proxmox node, same specs, emulation Q35 not FX440, disk tipe sata for windows VM, scsi for Linux and if you run centos 7 you have to use IDE
Boot CLONEZILA on both VM's
https://clonezilla.org/downloads/download.php?branch=stable
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=clonezila+network+cloning#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:01ac8a23,vid:8UGR_RLCptQ,st:0
3- select device to device cloning, the vmware vm is the surce, and on proxmox VM you select destination.
4- wait for things to finish,
We recommend you select a small VM and run some tests before you dive in the Production VM's.
Host-C - VPS Services Provider - AS211462
"If there is no struggle there is no progress"
Hi HC,
That's quite an in-depth howto,
thanks for the wiki-link as well!
@wankel
Sure thing, altho, option B always worked, well 99.9% of the time.
Watch out, not to mix the source and destination , you might end up with a "empty OS " . Do backup always on source.!
Host-C - VPS Services Provider - AS211462
"If there is no struggle there is no progress"
Go for virtfusion and never look back! Forget about virtualizor. That’s my advice