A Disk Read Error Occurred Vmware Converter Windows 2000
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NSXVirtual SAN vCenterFusionWorkstationvExpertVMware {code} CloudCredSubmit a Link Home > VMTN > VMware vCenter™ > VMware Converter Standalone > Discussions Please enter a title. You can not post a blank message. Please type your message and try again. 4 Replies Latest reply: Nov 30, 2009 1:40 AM by Shingi A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press vmware fusion disk read error occurred Ctrl+alt+del To Restart. Windows 2000 Shingi Nov 25, 2009 11:50 PM Hi.I have Windows
Vmware Converter Windows 2000 Server
2000on physical computer. On this computer I setup VMware vCenter Converter Standalone.I local run convert this computer. Job completed successfully.
Windows A Disk Read Error Occurred Press Ctrl+alt+del To Restart
When I run thisnew VM I have next on my screen: A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press Ctrlaltdel To Restart. What can I do tostart VM? P.S.
Vmware Converter Windows 98
Sorry for myEnglish:) 2935Views Tags: none (add) This content has been marked as final. Show 4 replies 1. Re: A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press Ctrl+alt+del To Restart. Windows 2000 AndreTheGiant Nov 25, 2009 11:56 PM (in response to Shingi) Have you choose to install the VMware Tools on the VM during the conversion?The source machine has IDE disk? The VM has SCSI disk?Andre Like Show 0 Likes (0) vmware converter windows vista Actions 2. Re: A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press Ctrl+alt+del To Restart. Windows 2000 Shingi Nov 26, 2009 12:07 AM (in response to AndreTheGiant) Yes, I choose to install VMware Tools.Source machine has IDE disk. VM has IDE disk too. Like Show 0 Likes (0) Actions 3. Re: A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press Ctrl+alt+del To Restart. Windows 2000 continuum Nov 26, 2009 2:28 AM (in response to Shingi) Don't assign IDE-disks while converting!It looks like Converter supports IDE for the target but thios seems to be a bluff.If you want you can still fix this by using a BartPE with the tool DriverInjectionGUI against the VM___________________________________ VMX-parameters- VMware-liveCD - VM-Sickbay Like Show 0 Likes (0) Actions 4. Re: A Disk Read Error Occurred. Press Ctrl+alt+del To Restart. Windows 2000 Shingi Nov 30, 2009 1:40 AM (in response to Shingi) Thank you. Reading your posts I make next:In options of converter I choose SCSI as destination disk. And after converting I run VM Windows Server 2000 with out problems. Like Show 0 Likes (0) Actions Go to original post Actions Remove from profile Feature on your profile More Like This Retrieving data ... Share This Page Legend Correct Answers - 10 points
(עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語) Home2012Previous VersionsLibraryForumsGallery Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Answered by: V2V - "Disk Read Error" virtual pc disk read error occurred System Center - Virtual Machine Manager > Virtual Machine Manager – parallels disk read error occurred P2V/V2V Question 0 Sign in to vote Hello! Fresh off the last P2V problem, I'm running into vmware player windows 2000 another one with a different server. The host machine is Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition running SCVMM R2. Both are fully patched. The source machine is Windows https://communities.vmware.com/thread/244372?tstart=0 Server 2000 Standard Edition SP4, also fully patched. I initially tried a P2V using SCVMM. Because it's 2000, an online P2V was not an option. An offline P2V was also not an option because Vista-compatible drivers do not exist for the NIC or the RAID card. (The RAID card is an Intel Serveraid 4L. The card https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/systemcenter/en-US/75a62871-953a-4a7f-b811-77a500dad197/v2v-disk-read-error?forum=virtualmachinemgrp2vv2v itself is OK but it installs two virtual failover drives that killed it for me. Maybe someone can tell me something about that?) I installed the VMWare Standalone Converter on another Server 2008 R2 Enterprise machine and converted it. From there, I tried a V2V in SCVMM. The V2V fails when trying to install the Hyper-V guest files because the machine will not boot. It gets a "Disk Read Error has Occurred" every time. I troubleshot this quite a bit and am coming up empty. To test that the initial P2V worked, I installed VMWare Server 2 on the same machine with the standalone converter. As a VMWare machine, it loads up perfectly. I cancel out of all new hardware wizards and followed steps from a few different websites about prepping it to move to hyper-v. I still get the same result. I've booted using a number of diagnostic tools and rebuilt the MBR, I've mounted it in the host server and made sure the
you don't know the cause of the problem. I was converting a plain physical MS WinXP machine to a virtual one and when it was all finished, I have started the machine and got this http://www.itino.net/a-disk-read-error-occured-press-ctlaltdelete-to-restart-at-vm-bootup/ message at VM bootup: "A disk read error occured, press ctl+alt+delete to restart". I was using a VMware Converter Standalone 4 on a vCenter 4 platform. Google gave me a lot of http://www.altaro.com/hyper-v/using-disk2vhd-for-physical-to-virtual-conversions-p2v/ possible solutions..from booting a WinXP recovery console to selecting a SCSI disk over IDE hard disk during conversion configuration, but the solution that worked for me was converting an IDE to SCSI disk read disk type after conversion. You have to write something in the VM configuration file so follow this steps to do so: 1. Connect to the ESX via SSH where your converted machine is located and go to your datastore path. example: cd /vmfs/volumes/"datastore name"/"virtual machine name"/ 2. Now edit the .vmdk file of the VM which is the primary disk file with your favorite disk read error editor - vi or nano (I prefer vi). 3. Look for the line: ddb.adapterType = "ide" and change that adapter type to "buslogic". example: ddb.adapterType = "buslogic" 4. Save changes and exit. 5. Now from your VMware Infrastructure/vSphere Client edit your virtual machine in a way that you remove the disk from it (do not delete it while removing!). Then add it as an existing disk - navigate to the location of the disk and select to add it into the virtual machine. While configuring the SCSI ID should read SCSI 0:0. 6. If a CDROM device exists in the virtual machine it may need to have the IDE channel changed because it could raise a problem while booting. Just remove it and add it again like an IDE 0:0. tino Vmware disk error, p2v, vmware convert Sync Firefox on multiple computersHow to activate GodMode in Microsoft Windows 7? Leave a Reply Cancel reply Name * Email * Website Post Comment Categories Cisco Linux Microsoft MikroTik Misc Security Vmware Google Copyright © 2016 ITino. Proudly powered by WordPress & Corporate Business WordPress Theme by Dinozoom. This site uses cookiesOkay, thanksFind out mo
101 FREE Hyper-V Tools A Free Configurable PowerShell Script for Hyper-V Export Our favorite Hyper-V & Windows Server Blogs Hyper-V Articles Browse: Home / Using Disk2VHD for Hyper-V P2V (Physical to Virtual) Conversions Featured Postby Eric Siron in Hyper-V ArticlesTags: hyper-v, tools, vhd Using Disk2VHD for Hyper-V P2V (Physical to Virtual) Conversions 01 Feb 2014 by Eric Siron 34 Hyper-V Articles Bringing a physical operating environment into Hyper-V can be a challenging task. It is recommended that you use some application-level migration rather than trying to convert a physical operating system installation directly. However, some systems do survive the transition well. One tool that can be used in conversion operations is Sysinternal's Disk2VHD.What is Disk2VHD?Disk2VHD is a software solution provided by Sysinternals. It reads the boot information, partition information, and data regions of a physical hard drive and produces a corresponding VHD or VHDX file. It is very important to understand that this is not a true physical-to-virtual conversion. The operating system is not prepared to run inside a virtual environment, nor is any cleanup work done on the source system to improve the odds of a successful migration.Microsoft Virtual Machine Converter 3.0Before using this Disk2VHD to attempt a P2V, you might try Microsoft's Virtual Machine Converter. It has been expanded to include P2V capability. The tool is provided free-of-charge. Visit the TechNet article for more information. The first link on that page will take you to the download.Downloading and Installing Disk2VHD for Hyper-V P2VSysinternals (now owned by Microsoft) offers this tool as a free download from TechNet. Please read their overview and warnings. There is no actual "installation" of this product. Simply extract the "disk2vhd.exe" file from the ZIP archive and place it on the system whose drives you wish to convert. You can also extract the "Disk2vhd.chm" file; this is the software's help manual.Jeffery Hicks has also written a PowerShell script that will retrieve and update the entire Sysinternals catalog.Pre-Flight Checks and ProceduresIt's a hard fact that physical to virtual conversions are fraught with peril. The older the operating system, the greater the risk. A few things that you sho