Enterprise Desktop.com

Using P2V Migration for Software Assurance for Windows 7 upgrades

By Serdar Yegulalp

Talk to almost any IT administrator, and he'll speak of Windows XP as "the operating system that just won't quit." Despite its age and Microsoft's insistence that it be put out to pasture in favor of Windows 7, XP hangs in there.

Microsoft realized that it couldn't do away with XP in one swoop, so it has settled for inching it out incrementally. One key technology it deployed in Windows 7 to make this possible is Windows XP Mode, a virtual machine copy of XP that runs in Windows 7 through Windows Virtual PC. This allows users to install and run applications and hardware that require XP side by side with Windows 7 applications.

While this is a good option if you're deploying a new Windows 7 desktop and want backward compatibility with Windows XP, what if you have a XP desktop and want to preserve information going forward?

This is where P2V Migration for Software Assurance comes in.

It's a Solution Accelerator used with the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit 2010 to convert an existing Windows XP installation to a virtual hard drive (.VHD) file when the install is targeted for a Windows 7 (Enterprise or Professional) upgrade. It uses the Sysinternals utility Disk2VHD to perform the actual migration of the hard drive to a .VHD file (the utility will be automatically downloaded).

When the upgrade is finished, the old install of Windows XP is available in a virtual machine, and its applications are published into Windows 7's Start menu. The entire capture process is automatic.

As handy as P2V Migration is, it's bound by several limitations:

Because of these challenges, Microsoft recommends physical to virtual (P2V) migration only in very specific circumstances, which are outlined and detailed by Windows Team Senior Product Manager Jeremy Chapman in a blog post. These circumstances include the following:

You shouldn't migrate more than a few machines in your organization with P2V Migration, and it's important to determine whether you really need to use the tool or if other upgrade paths would be more fruitful.

But P2V Migration can be handy for the desktops that might be nearly impossible to work with any other way.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Serdar Yegulalp has been writing about personal computing and IT for more than 15 years for a variety of publications, including (among others) Windows Magazine, InformationWeek and the TechTarget family of sites.

30 Mar 2011

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