Acronis true image echo Manual

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91                                                                                 Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2009 
 
This allows:  
•  the fastest replacement of the physical machine with the previously created virtual 
copy 
•  moving multiple workloads from legacy physical servers to virtual machines to reduce 
hardware maintenance and power consumption costs. 
The alternative method of physical to virtual migration is by restoring a physical disk 
from an image to a virtual machine. The procedure is the same as with restoring physical 
machines.  
To ensure booting up the system on the virtual machine, use Acronis Universal Restore. If 
the target virtual drive is a SCSI hard drive, provide appropriate drivers. For example, the 
VMware environment requires Buslogic or LSI logic drivers. Use drivers bundled with your 
virtualization software or download the latest drivers versions from the software 
manufacturer’s website. For more information about the recovery procedure see 
 
The inverse migration - virtual to physical - is done using common disk imaging and 
restoring: 
1. Create images of all (or some) virtual machine disks, including the system disk. 
2. Restore the images to physical disks. When restoring a system disk, use Acronis 
Universal Restore. Complete the hardware driver configuration if Windows prompts. 
Combination of the two migration features gives you the flexibility to implement a lot of 
scenarios, for example: 
•  replace your physical server on the network with its virtual copy, while the server is 
recovered or upgraded 
•  test the new software or other changes you wish to make to the server on its virtual 
copy and then apply the changes to the physical server. 
12.3.4  Converting workloads 
You can convert workloads from one virtual technology to another through imaging virtual 
drives. For example, let’s say your company uses Microsoft Virtual Servers, but you need 
to use VMware-based virtual appliances. This is easy to do with the conversion 
functionality. Again, a Windows system image will be supplemented with appropriate 
system drivers during conversion so that Windows could boot up on the another type of 
VM. 
1. Create images of all (or some) virtual machine disks, including the system disk. 
2. Convert the images to virtual disks of desired format. 
3. Create a new VM of the desired type with the converted system disk.  
4. Add the other converted disks to the VM. 
5. Start the VM and complete the hardware driver configuration if Windows prompts. 
12. 4  Converting disk images to virtual disks 
To convert a disk image to a virtual disk file: 
1. Select Tools -> Convert to Virtual Disk in the main program menu.