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Hyper-V 2016 Best Practices

You're reading from   Hyper-V 2016 Best Practices Harness the power of Hyper-V 2016 to build high-performance infrastructures that suit your needs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883392
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Benedict Berger Benedict Berger
Author Profile Icon Benedict Berger
Benedict Berger
Romain Serre Romain Serre
Author Profile Icon Romain Serre
Romain Serre
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Accelerating Hyper-V Deployment FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying Highly Available Hyper-V Clusters 3. Backup and Disaster Recovery 4. Storage Best Practices 5. Network Best Practices 6. Highly Effective Hyper-V Design 7. Hyper-V Performance Tuning 8. Management with System Center and Azure 9. Migration to Hyper-V 2016

Physical to Virtual conversions

While server virtualization is common in Enterprise datacenter, most of my customers are still running some physical server systems for legacy reasons. Those workloads can be transferred to virtual machines as well with Physical to Virtual (P2V) conversions.

Again, there are several tools available on the market to accomplish this task, including the new MVMC 3.0, SCVMM 2012 SP1 (the R2 version dropped P2V support in favor of MVMC 3.0), and Disc2VHD. P2V conversions are very complex tasks.

Disc2VHD is started on the physical system you want to convert. Stop all databases and services involved in your server workloads and let Disc2VHD do its work. It will create a VSS snapshot and then create a VHDX file on a per-block level from the physical disk and its partition. Just attach this created VHDX file, which is bootable, to a newly created Hyper-V VM. This is very simple but most efficient.

This is shown in the following screenshot:

Physical to Virtual conversions

Disc2VHD

Like most P2V solutions...

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