Posts Tagged ‘VMware homelab’

Part 100: HOW TO: P2V A Linux Ubuntu PC using VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 9.0

Wednesday, November 19th, 2025

 

 

HOWTO: P2V a Linux Ubuntu PC Using VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 9.0

Migrating physical machines into virtual environments continues to be a key task for many administrators, homelabbers, and anyone modernising older systems. With the release of VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 9.0, VMware has brought back a fully supported, modernised, and feature-rich toolset for performing P2V (Physical-to-Virtual) conversions.

In this post, I walk through how to P2V a powered-on Ubuntu 22.04 Linux PC, using Converter 9.0, as featured in my recent Hancock’s VMware Half Hour episode.

This guide covers each stage of the workflow, from configuring the source Linux machine to selecting the destination datastore and reviewing the final conversion job. Whether you’re prepping for a migration, building a new VM template, or preserving older hardware, this step-by-step breakdown will help you get the job done smoothly.


Video Tutorial

If you prefer to follow along with the full step-by-step:
Embed your YouTube video here once uploaded.


What’s New in VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 9.0?

  • A refreshed and modern UI
  • Improved compatibility with modern Linux distributions
  • Updated helper VM for Linux conversions
  • Support for newer ESXi and vSphere versions
  • Better overall performance and reliability
  • Linux P2V via passwordless sudo-enabled accounts

This makes it far easier to bring physical Linux workloads into your virtual infrastructure.


Full Tutorial Breakdown (Step-by-Step)

Below is a summary of all the steps demonstrated in the video:

  • Step 1 — Open Converter & Select “Convert Machine”
  • Step 2 — Choose “Powered On”
  • Step 3 — Detect Source Machine
  • Step 4 — Select “Remote Linux Machine”
  • Step 5 — Enter FQDN of the Linux PC
  • Step 6 — Use a passwordless sudo-enabled user account
  • Step 7 — Enter the password
  • Step 8 — Proceed to the next stage
  • Step 9 — Enter ESXi or vCenter Server FQDN
  • Step 10 — Authenticate with username and password
  • Step 11 — Continue
  • Step 12 — Name your destination VM
  • Step 13 — Choose datastore & VM hardware version
  • Step 14 — Go to the next screen
  • Step 15 — TIP: Avoid making unnecessary changes!
  • Step 16 — Next
  • Step 17 — Review settings and click “Finish”
  • Step 18 — Monitor the conversion job
  • Step 19 — Review Helper VM deployment on ESXi
  • Step 20 — Cloning process begins
  • Step 21 — Converter best practices & tips
  • Step 22 — Conversion reaches 98%
  • Step 23 — Conversion reaches 100%
  • Step 24 — Disable network on the destination VM
  • Step 25 — Power on the VM
  • Step 26 — Teaser: Something special about Brother 52 (esxi052)!

Why Disable the Network Before First Boot?

Doing this avoids:

  • IP conflicts
  • Hostname duplication
  • Duplicate MAC address issues
  • Unwanted services broadcasting from the cloned system

After confirming the VM boots correctly, you can safely reconfigure networking inside the guest.


Final Thoughts

VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 9.0 brings P2V workflows back into the modern VMware ecosystem. With full Linux support—including Ubuntu 22.04—it’s easier than ever to migrate physical workloads into vSphere.

If you’re maintaining a homelab, doing DR planning, or preserving old systems, Converter remains one of the most valuable free tools VMware continues to offer.

Stay tuned — the next video showcases something special about Brother 52 (esxi052) that you won’t want to miss!


Don’t Forget!

  • Like the video
  • Subscribe to Hancock’s VMware Half Hour
  • Leave a comment — What P2V tutorial should I do next?

Part 2: Building a DIY NVMe NAS with the Intel NUC 11 Extreme (Beast Canyon) – Testing hardware with Windows 11 (and When Things Go Pete Tong!)

Sunday, November 16th, 2025

Welcome back to Part 2 of our DIY Unraid NAS adventure!
In Part 1, we unboxed the hardware, checked the spec, and got ready to build a tiny but mighty home-brew NAS around the Intel NUC “Skull” chassis.

Before committing this machine to Unraid full-time, I wanted to run a quick hardware test — and what better way than to throw a Windows 11 installation at it? Simple, right?

Well… maybe not.
As usual, things went a bit Pete Tong along the way! ?


Booting the NUC – and Immediate Problems

The video starts with the NUC firing up nicely… until I discover the mouse isn’t working.
Not ideal when you’re trying to install an OS.

After poking around, I realise the issue is down to the NanoKVM I use for remote access.
The trick?
Switch the KVM to HID mode only — suddenly the mouse returns from the dead.

Lesson learned:
Tiny KVMs can cause BIG installation headaches.


Ventoy + Windows 11 ISO = Let’s Try This Again

Once the input devices were behaving, I booted Ventoy from USB and selected the Windows 11 ISO.

This part should be smooth.
Except it wasn’t.

Windows 11 booted fine…
The setup loaded…
Language and keyboard selected…
Version chosen…
Installation begins…

Then:
“Windows 11 installation has failed.”

No reason.
No explanation.
Just a failure screen and a shrug.

Excellent.


If At First You Don’t Succeed – Install Again

Time for round two.

Ventoy ? Windows 11 ISO ? Setup ? Install
Copying files…

YES!
It finally completes.

That warm feeling of success lasted a whole ten seconds before Windows restarted to continue configuration — and hit me with another set of “what now?!” delays.

Still, persistence wins.
Eventually we get to:

  • Keyboard setup

  • Feature selection

  • Updates

  • Account creation

  • Security questions

  • More updates

  • Even more updates

Whoever said installing Windows 11 only takes 10 minutes was telling porkies.


Finally… Windows 11 Desktop

After the second attempt, repeated reboots, KVM issues, updates, and the bizarre initial failure, we finally land on a clean, working Windows 11 desktop.

Why bother with all this before Unraid?

Because hardware burn-in testing NOW can save hours (or days) of pain LATER.

And, despite the chaos, the system:

  • Booted reliably

  • Handled disk I/O without any red flags

  • Passed the Windows installation stress test

  • Proved the RAM and NVMe are behaving

  • Survived the “Hancock Troubleshooting Gauntlet”™

So we can move into Part 3 with confidence!

Minisforum MS-A2 Can it Run ESXi 9.0.0? Minisforum MS-A2 Series Part 11 Ultimate #homelab

Saturday, August 9th, 2025

 

Minisforum MS-A2 Can it Run ESXi 9.0.0? Minisforum MS-A2 Series Part 11 Ultimate #homelab

Can the Minisforum MS-A2 handle VMware’s latest ESXi 9.0.0?

In Part 11 of the Ultimate #homelab series, we put the MS-A2 to the test with the brand-new VMware vSphere Hypervisor ESXi 9.0. From BIOS boot to creating a demo virtual machine, you’ll see the entire installation process and whether this mini PC can run the latest VMware tech.

What’s Inside This Video:

Installing ESXi 9.0.0 on the Minisforum MS-A2

BIOS boot & USB installer setup

First boot and installation walkthrough

Testing NVMe devices & enabling NVMe Memory Tiering

Creating and running a demo virtual machine

Connecting with the HTML Web Client and checking performance

If you’ve been thinking about upgrading your homelab to vSphere 9.0, this is your step-by-step look at how it runs on a small but powerful platform.

Minisforum MS-A2 Can it Run ESXi 8.0.3g ? Minisforum MS-A2 Series Part 10 Ultimate #homelab

Saturday, August 9th, 2025

 

Can the powerful Minisforum MS-A2 run VMware vSphere 8.0?
In Part 10 of the Ultimate #homelab series, we put this compact beast to the test by installing VMware vSphere Hypervisor ESXi 8.0.3g and seeing how it performs. From BIOS setup to creating a demo virtual machine, this episode covers the full journey.

What’s Inside This Video:

Installing ESXi 8.0.3g on the Minisforum MS-A2

BIOS configuration & USB boot with Ventoy

Full ESXi setup walkthrough

Creating & running a test VM

Enabling NVMe Memory Tiering with NVMe namespaces

Checking performance and confirming a successful install

If you’ve been wondering whether the MS-A2 can handle serious VMware workloads in a home lab, this is the episode to watch!