Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter Solution Accelerator Beta

Hyper-V R2 SP1

Microsoft released a beta of a new Solution Accelerator called “Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter”. The Converter helps you to migrate Virtual Machines from VMware vSphere to Microsoft Hyper-V.

About the Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter Solution Accelerator

The Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter (MVMC) provides a Microsoft-supported, freely available, standalone solution for converting VMware virtual machines (VMs) and VMware virtual disks (VMDKs) to Hyper-V virtual machines and Hyper-V virtual hard disks (VHDs). MVMC supports converting virtual machines using the following guest operating systems:

  • Windows Server 2003 with Service Pack 2
  • Windows Server 2003 R2 with Service Pack 2
  • Windows Server 2008 R2
  • Windows 7

The Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter converts VMware virtual machines created with:

  • VMware vSphere 4.1
  • VMware vSphere 5.0

To virtual machines for:

  • Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 Hyper-V
  • Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 SP1

The Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter:

  • Provides a quick, low-risk option for VMware customers to evaluate Hyper-V
  • Converts the virtual disks and the VMware VMs configuration, such as memory, virtual processor, and other machine settings from the source
  • Uninstalls the VMware tools on the source VM and installs the Hyper-V Integration Services as appropriate
  • Includes an easy-to-use wizard-driven GUI simplifying VM conversion
    Supports offline conversions of VMware virtual hard disks (VMDK) to a Hyper-V based virtual hard disk file format (VHD)
  • Includes a scriptable Command Line Interfaces (CLI) for performing machine conversion and offline disk conversion which integrates with datacenter automation workflows, such as those authored and executed within System Center Orchestrator. The command line can also be invoked through PowerShell.

 

Check it out on Microsoft Connect: https://connect.microsoft.com/site14/MVMC

Microsoft Case Study: HCI Solutions

logo_itnetx

Just a quick link to a Private Cloud Case Study done by Microsoft about one of our partners.

Microsoft Case Study: HCI Solutions

http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-System-Center-2012/HCI-Solutions/Healthcare-Firm-Gains-More-Efficiency-Cuts-Costs-with-Private-Cloud-Environment/710000000186

 

System Center 2012 RTM downloads available

 

Since last weekend System Center 2012 RTM downloads are ready for Volume License Customer and Monday night the SC2012 downloads are also available for MSDN and TechNet subscription owners.

http://msdn.microsoft.com

http://technet.microsoft.com

 

I love System Center 2012 Wallpaper

Microsoft System Center Logo

Cleber Marques has created some nice System Center 2012 Wallpapers. You can choose between different verions and colors of the wallpaper.

You can get them here: http://bit.ly/scwallpaper

Setup System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 SP1 CTP

Windows Server 8

Microsoft System Center Logo

This quick how-to blog postshows you how you can setup the new released System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 SP1 CTP.

Get software

First download the software:

You also need a Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 with SQL 2008 R2 and Service Pack 1

SC2012CTPsetup

Setup SQL Server 2008 R2 SP1

  1. Install a Windows Server 2008 R2 with SP1
  2. Install MS SQL Server 2008 R2 with SP1
  3. Open SQL Firewall Ports, so SCVMM can access the SQL Server

Setup SCVMM 2012 SP1 CTP

  1. Setup a Windows Server 8 with the latest updates
  2. Install the .NET Framework 3.5 Features with the Server Manager
    image
    or with Windows PowerShell:
    [Powershell]
    Add-WindowsFeature NET-Framework-Features
    Add-WindowsFeature NET-Framework-Core
    [/Powershell]
  3. Install The Windows® Automated Installation Kit (AIK) for Windows® 7
  4. Install the Microsoft® SQL Server® 2008 R2 Native Client
  5. Install the Microsoft® SQL Server® 2008 R2 Command Line Utilities
  6. Start the setup.exe and click install
    image
  7. Choose VMM management server and click next
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  8. Configure the SQL connection to your SQL Server
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  9. Configure a service account. The service account you use has to member of the local administrator group on the SCVMM server and it should not be the default domain administrator.Because if you use the domain administrator as service acocunt you can not use it as “RunAs” account in SCVMM.
    image
  10. Configure the Library share
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  11. Install Winking smile
    image