Launch the PlateSpin Migrate Web Interface.
On the Workloads page, select the workload you want to configure.
Click Configure Migration.
Select one of the following based on the scope of data you want to transfer from the source to the target:
Full Replication: A full volume of data transfer takes place from the source to the target.
Incremental Replication: Only differences are transferred from the source to the target, provided they have similar operating system and volume profiles.
Select the VM host, which you previously configured as a target, to which you want to migrate the source data. Select.
If the target you need is not yet configured, click Add Targets, configure the target, then try again to configure the workload. See Section 21.0, Discovering Target Platforms.
Click Configure Migration.
Configure the following settings:
Setting Name |
Description |
---|---|
Schedule Settings |
|
Incremental Recurrence |
Specify the following:
|
Full Replication |
Do one of the following:
NOTE:You must prepare the workload prior to the scheduled time.The full replication cannot run unless the target VM exists and the workload preparation is complete. Migrate skips the scheduled full replication and retries it at the next scheduled time. |
Blackout Window |
Use these settings to force a replication blackout. The replication blackout suspends scheduled replications during peak utilization hours or prevents conflicts between VSS-aware software and the PlateSpin VSS block-level data transfer component. To specify a blackout window, click Edit and do the following:
NOTE:The blackout start and end times are based on the system clock on the PlateSpin Server. |
Compression Level |
These settings control whether data is compressed during transmission between the source and target workloads, and the level of data compression applied.See Data Compression.Select one of the following options:
|
Bandwidth Throttling |
These settings control the bandwidth throttling. PlateSpin Migrate enables you to control the amount of available bandwidth consumed by direct source-to-target communication over the course of a workload migration. You can specify a throughput rate for each migration job. Throttling provides a way to prevent migration traffic from congesting your production network and to reduce the overall load of your PlateSpin Server. To throttle replications to a specified rate, specify the required throughput value in Mbps and the time pattern. |
Migration Settings |
|
Transfer Method |
(For Windows Workloads) Select a data transfer mechanism and security through encryption.See Supported Data Transfer Methods. To enable encryption, select the Encrypt Data Transfer option. See Security and Privacy. NOTE:The Offline Transfer with Temporary Boot Environment transfer method is not applicable for the Web interface. |
Transfer Encryption |
(For Linux Workloads) To enable encryption, select the Encrypt Data Transfer option.See Security and Privacy. |
Source Credentials |
Specify the credentials required for accessing the workload. See Discovery Guidelines for Source Workloads. |
CPU |
(For migration to vCloud and VM platforms using supported versions of VMware 5.1 and later with a minimum VM hardware Level 8) Specify the number of sockets and the number of cores per socket for the target workload. It automatically calculates the total cores. This parameter applies on the initial setup of a workload with an initial replication setting of Full Replication. NOTE:The maximum number of cores the workload can use is subject to external factors such as the guest operating system, the VM hardware version, VMware licensing for the ESXi host, and ESXi host compute maximums for vSphere (see ESXi/ESX Configuration Maximums (VMware KB 1003497)). Some distributions of a guest OS might not honor the cores and cores per socket configuration. For example, guest OSes using SLES 10 SP4 retain their original cores and sockets settings as installed, whereas other SLES and RHEL distributions honor the configuration. |
Number of CPUs |
(For migration to VM platforms using VMware 4.1) Specify the required number of vCPUs (virtual CPUs) to assign to the target workload. This parameter applies on the initial setup of a workload with an initial replication setting of Full Replication. Each vCPU is presented to the guest OS on the VM platform as a single core, single socket. |
Resource Pool for Target VM |
(For migration to VM platform that is part of a DRS Cluster) Specify the Resource Pool location where the migrated VM is to be created. |
VM Folder for Target VM |
(For migration to VM platform that is part of a DRS Cluster) Specify the VM folder location where the migrated VM is to be created. |
Virtual Machine Name |
Specify a display name for the new virtual machine. |
Configuration File Datastore |
Select a datastore associated with your VM for storing VM configuration files. |
Virtual Machine Configuration Path |
Specify the path to the configuration file on the target virtual machine. |
Disks |
Specify the path to the hard disk on the target virtual machine. |
Volumes |
Select volumes to be included in the target for migration. |
NTFS Cluster Size |
(For File-Based Windows Workloads) Specify the cluster size for the NTFS volume. For information about the default cluster size for an NTFS volume, see the Microsoft Support KB Article 140365. |
Non-volume Storage |
(For Linux Workloads) Specify a non-volume storage, such as a swap partition, that is associated with the source workload. This storage is re-created in the migrated workload. |
Disks For Volume Groups |
(For Linux Workloads) Specify the datastore name and the path where the virtual disk must be created on the target machine. You can choose to retain the path specified by default. |
Volume Groups |
(For Linux Workloads) Specify the LVM volume groups to be migrated with the LVM logical volumes listed in the Converted Logical Volumes section of the settings. |
Converted Logical Volumes |
(For Linux Workloads) Specify one or more LVM logical volumes to be migrated for a Linux workload. |
Replication Network for Target |
Specify a network interface (NIC or IP address) on the target to use for replication traffic. |
Replication Networks for Source |
Specify one or more network interfaces (NIC or IP address) on the source to use for replication traffic. |
Services to Stop Before Any Replication |
(For Windows Workloads) We recommend that all the non-VSS compliant services or anti-virus are stopped temporarily on the source while the VSS snapshot is being captured on the source. Select the Windows services that you want to be temporarily stopped on the source workload while the VSS snapshot is being captured on the source. These services are restored as soon as the VSS snapshot creation completes. |
Services to Stop for Cutover with Replication |
(For Windows Workloads) Select the Windows services that should be permanently stopped on the source workload for cutover with any replication. The services stopped on the source workload during the replication process are not restored afterwards. This does not apply for Test Cutover. |
Daemons to Stop Before Any Replication |
(For Linux Workloads) Select the Linux daemons that you want to be temporarily stopped on the source workload before replication. These daemons will be restored after replication completes. |
Daemons to Stop for Cutover with Replication |
(For Linux Workloads) Select the Linux daemons that should be permanently stopped on the source workload for Cutover with any Replication. The daemons stopped on the source workload during the replication process are not restored after Cutover. The stopped daemons are restored after a Test Cutover. |
Target Workload Settings (These settings are applied during the Run Cutover) |
|
VM Memory |
Specify the amount of memory allocated to the target workload. |
VM Tools |
To install the VM tools, select the Install VM Tools option. This option is selected by default. |
Hostname |
Do one of the following:
|
System Identifier (SID) - (This setting is applicable only for Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2003) |
Before you generate a new SID for the Windows Server 2003 target workload computer, you must do the following:
To generate a new system identifier for the target workload, select Generate New System Identifier (SID) in the Target Workload Test Settings section of the Web Interface. For Windows Server 2008, you must specify the local Administrator account credentials. If this account has been locally renamed on the source, provide the new name. |
Domain / Workgroup |
(For Windows Workloads) Depending on whether the source workload belongs to workgroup or domain, one of the following displays:
Do one of the following depending on where you want the target workload to join:
|
Domain Credentials |
(For Windows Workloads) If you select Join Domain, specify the domain administrator credentials. |
Network Connections |
Select the local area connection and then select one of the following:
For Windows workloads that have more than one NIC, select the connection for each NIC. |
DNS Servers |
Specify the DNS Servers for the target workloads. This is applicable only if you select Static in the Network Connections option:
|
Services States on Target VM |
(For Windows Workloads) Select Windows services’ start conditions on the target VM. Start options are Automatic, Manual, Disabled, and Automatic (Delayed Start). |
Daemons States to Change |
(For Linux Workloads) Select Linux daemons’ start conditions on the target VM. Enable the daemon to start by selecting the check boxes at the appropriate runlevels (0 to 6) and Boot. |
Target Workload Test Settings (These settings are applied during the Test Cutover) |
|
Copy Target Workload Settings |
|
Click the Copy Target Workload Settings option to automatically copy the workload settings from Target Workload Settings (These settings are applied during the Run Cutover) section to Target Workload Test Settings (These settings are applied during the Test Cutover) section. |
|
VM Memory |
Specify the amount of memory allocated to the target workload. |
VM Tools |
To install the VM tools, select the Install VM Tools option. This option is selected by default. |
Hostname |
Do one of the following:
|
System Identifier (SID) - (This Setting is applicable only for Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2003) |
Before you generate a new SID for the Windows Server 2003 target workload computer, you must do the following:
To generate a new system identifier for the target workload, select Generate New System Identifier (SID) in the Target Workload Test Settings section of the Web Interface. For Windows Server 2008, you must specify the local Administrator account credentials. If this account has been locally renamed on the source, provide the new name. |
Domain / Workgroup |
(For Windows Workloads) Depending on whether the source workload belongs to workgroup or domain, one of the following displays:
Do one of the following depending on where you want the target workload to join:
|
Domain Credentials |
(For Windows Workloads) If you select Join Domain, specify the domain administrator credentials. |
Network Connections |
Select the network connection and then select one of the following:
|
DNS Servers |
Specify the DNS Servers for the target workloads. This is applicable only if you select Static in the Network Connections option:
|
Services States on Target VM |
(For Windows Workloads) Select Windows services that must be automatically stopped on the target VM. |
Daemons States to Change |
(For Linux Workloads) Select Linux daemons that must be automatically stopped on the target VM. |
Tag |
|
Tag |
Select a tag to assign to the workload. See Managing Workload Tags. |
(Optional) To change the target, click Change Target.
NOTE:If you change the target, all the settings you specified will be cleared.
Do one of the following:
Click Save to save the settings.
Click Save and Prepare to save the settings and start preparing the workload migration.
Click Cancel to exit.