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3.3.2. Converting a remote KVM virtual machine

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KVM virtual machines can be converted remotely using SSH. Ensure that the host running the virtual machine is accessible using SSH.
To convert the virtual machine, run:
virt-v2v -ic qemu+ssh://root@vmhost.example.com/system -op pool --bridge bridge_name guest_name
Where vmhost.example.com is the host running the virtual machine, pool is the local storage pool to hold the image, bridge_name is the name of a local network bridge to connect the converted virtual machine's network to, and guest_name is the name of the Xen virtual machine.
You may also use the --network parameter to connect to a locally managed network if your virtual machine only has a single network interface. If your virtual machine has multiple network interfaces, edit /etc/virt-v2v.conf to specify the network mapping for all interfaces.
If your virtual machine is Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 or Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and uses a kernel which does not support the KVM VirtIO drivers, virt-v2v will attempt to install a new kernel during the conversion process. You can avoid this requirement by updating the kernel to a recent version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 which supports VirtIO prior to conversion.

Note

When converting from KVM, virt-v2v requires that the image of the source virtual machine exists within a storage pool. If the image is not currently in a storage pool, you must create one.
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