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Move Physical Systems to Virtual Environments

Move Physical Systems to Virtual Environments

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Greeperakos
Member
174
02-09-2023, 05:50 PM
#1
You're looking to transfer your operating systems from old boot disks to a virtual disk. It sounds like you want to preserve the images rather than just discarding everything. The process involves backing up your systems and then cloning or migrating those backups to a virtual disk. You might need tools that simplify this, especially if you're new to the task. Just be sure to keep your important data safe before starting.
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Greeperakos
02-09-2023, 05:50 PM #1

You're looking to transfer your operating systems from old boot disks to a virtual disk. It sounds like you want to preserve the images rather than just discarding everything. The process involves backing up your systems and then cloning or migrating those backups to a virtual disk. You might need tools that simplify this, especially if you're new to the task. Just be sure to keep your important data safe before starting.

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_SkillzHD_
Junior Member
46
02-09-2023, 06:18 PM
#2
They can easily be converted into ISO files, making it simple to use VM tools. When you need to restart those older operating systems, just run them inside the virtual machine.
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_SkillzHD_
02-09-2023, 06:18 PM #2

They can easily be converted into ISO files, making it simple to use VM tools. When you need to restart those older operating systems, just run them inside the virtual machine.

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Antez03
Member
174
02-10-2023, 05:04 AM
#3
I understand the context of booting VMware, but I need to clarify my approach. I'm planning to run on a Linux host (Ubuntu 16.04) to take full advantage of VT-D support. Additionally, I want to use the built-in DNS package to handle any future errors, so I don't have to depend solely on ISP DNS servers. Unless the hypervisor allows VMs to receive physical devices, I'll migrate all operating systems to the Ubuntu VM Manager, using a "MEGA" backup image that includes Ubuntu plus the ISO files. If not, I'll move everything to Ubuntu's VM Manager and create a backup containing both the OS and ISO images.
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Antez03
02-10-2023, 05:04 AM #3

I understand the context of booting VMware, but I need to clarify my approach. I'm planning to run on a Linux host (Ubuntu 16.04) to take full advantage of VT-D support. Additionally, I want to use the built-in DNS package to handle any future errors, so I don't have to depend solely on ISP DNS servers. Unless the hypervisor allows VMs to receive physical devices, I'll migrate all operating systems to the Ubuntu VM Manager, using a "MEGA" backup image that includes Ubuntu plus the ISO files. If not, I'll move everything to Ubuntu's VM Manager and create a backup containing both the OS and ISO images.

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Ebkon
Member
166
02-11-2023, 08:16 PM
#4
VMware allows external devices and disc drives to connect to a VM, and I believe virtualbox does as well. Cannot represent other products.
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Ebkon
02-11-2023, 08:16 PM #4

VMware allows external devices and disc drives to connect to a VM, and I believe virtualbox does as well. Cannot represent other products.

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yoruyohan
Member
114
02-19-2023, 06:01 PM
#5
It's unlikely the Windows certification servers would block this. Running a cloned image in its installed state on another boot disk usually works fine, though you should verify the specific requirements for the version you're trying to install.
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yoruyohan
02-19-2023, 06:01 PM #5

It's unlikely the Windows certification servers would block this. Running a cloned image in its installed state on another boot disk usually works fine, though you should verify the specific requirements for the version you're trying to install.

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robbierobot99
Member
102
02-25-2023, 08:40 PM
#6
The system needs to be active both in the physical machine and the VM for bets to work. If it's only running in one environment, the outcome won't be reliable. Microsoft doesn't matter much in this case. You're free to use the license wherever you like. VMware offers a "virtualize physical machine" option that I haven't used yet but seems effective.
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robbierobot99
02-25-2023, 08:40 PM #6

The system needs to be active both in the physical machine and the VM for bets to work. If it's only running in one environment, the outcome won't be reliable. Microsoft doesn't matter much in this case. You're free to use the license wherever you like. VMware offers a "virtualize physical machine" option that I haven't used yet but seems effective.

C
cutiecookie1
Junior Member
23
02-25-2023, 09:13 PM
#7
Planning to run both at once? I’m focusing on moving the operating system entirely from a physical disk to a virtual one.
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cutiecookie1
02-25-2023, 09:13 PM #7

Planning to run both at once? I’m focusing on moving the operating system entirely from a physical disk to a virtual one.

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CaporalUlfy
Member
158
03-11-2023, 07:37 AM
#8
You should be okay.
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CaporalUlfy
03-11-2023, 07:37 AM #8

You should be okay.