Provided by: virt-v2v_2.4.0-2build4_amd64 bug

NAME

       virt-v2v - Convert a guest to use KVM

SYNOPSIS

        virt-v2v [-i mode] [other -i* options]
                 [-o mode] [other -o* options]
                 [guest|filename]

DESCRIPTION

       Virt-v2v converts a single guest from a foreign hypervisor to run on KVM.  It can read Linux and Windows
       guests running on VMware, Xen, Hyper-V and some other hypervisors, and convert them to KVM managed by
       libvirt, OpenStack, oVirt, Red Hat Virtualisation (RHV) or several other targets.  It can modify the
       guest to make it bootable on KVM and install virtio drivers so it will run quickly.

       There is also a companion front-end called virt-p2v(1) which comes as an ISO, CD or PXE image that can be
       booted on physical machines to virtualize those machines (physical to virtual, or p2v).

       To estimate the disk space needed before conversion, see virt-v2v-inspector(1).

       For in-place conversion, there is a separate tool called virt-v2v-in-place(1).

   Input and Output
       You normally run virt-v2v with several -i* options controlling the input mode and also several -o*
       options controlling the output mode.  In this sense, "input" refers to the source foreign hypervisor such
       as VMware, and "output" refers to the target KVM-based management system such as oVirt or OpenStack.

       The input and output sides of virt-v2v are separate and unrelated.  Virt-v2v can read from any input and
       write to any output.  Therefore these sides of virt-v2v are documented separately in this manual.

       Virt-v2v normally copies from the input to the output, called "copying mode".  In this case the source
       guest is always left unchanged.  In-place conversions may be done using virt-v2v-in-place(1).

   Other virt-v2v topics
       virt-v2v-support(1) — Supported hypervisors, virtualization management systems, guests.

       virt-v2v-input-vmware(1) — Input from VMware.

       virt-v2v-input-xen(1) — Input from Xen.

       virt-v2v-output-local(1) — Output to local files or local libvirt.

       virt-v2v-output-rhv(1) — Output to oVirt or RHV.

       virt-v2v-output-openstack(1) — Output to OpenStack.

       virt-v2v-release-notes-1.42(1) — Release notes for 1.42 release.

       virt-v2v-release-notes-2.0(1) — Release notes for 2.0 release.

       virt-v2v-release-notes-2.2(1) — Release notes for 2.2 release.

       virt-v2v-release-notes-2.4(1) — Release notes for 2.4 release.

EXAMPLES

   Convert from VMware vCenter server to local libvirt
       You have a VMware vCenter server called "vcenter.example.com", a datacenter called "Datacenter", and an
       ESXi hypervisor called "esxi".  You want to convert a guest called "vmware_guest" to run locally under
       libvirt.

        virt-v2v -ic vpx://vcenter.example.com/Datacenter/esxi vmware_guest

       In this case you will most likely have to run virt-v2v as "root", since it needs to talk to the system
       libvirt daemon and copy the guest disks to /var/lib/libvirt/images.

       For more information see virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).

   Convert from VMware to RHV/oVirt
       This is the same as the previous example, except you want to send the guest to a RHV Data Domain using
       the RHV REST API.  Guest network interface(s) are connected to the target network called "ovirtmgmt".

        virt-v2v -ic vpx://vcenter.example.com/Datacenter/esxi vmware_guest \
          -o rhv-upload -oc https://ovirt-engine.example.com/ovirt-engine/api \
          -os ovirt-data -op /tmp/ovirt-admin-password -of raw \
          -oo rhv-cafile=/tmp/ca.pem --bridge ovirtmgmt

       In this case the host running virt-v2v acts as a conversion server.

       For more information see virt-v2v-output-rhv(1).

   Convert from ESXi hypervisor over SSH to local libvirt
       You have an ESXi hypervisor called "esxi.example.com" with SSH access enabled.  You want to convert from
       VMFS storage on that server to a local file.

        virt-v2v \
          -i vmx -it ssh \
          "ssh://root@esxi.example.com/vmfs/volumes/datastore1/guest/guest.vmx" \
          -o local -os /var/tmp

       The guest must not be running.  Virt-v2v would not need to be run as root in this case.

       For more information about converting from VMX files see virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).

   Convert disk image to OpenStack
       Given a disk image from another hypervisor that you want to convert to run on OpenStack (only KVM-based
       OpenStack is supported), you can run virt-v2v inside an OpenStack VM (called "v2v-vm" below), and do:

        virt-v2v -i disk disk.img -o openstack -oo server-id=v2v-vm

       See virt-v2v-output-openstack(1).

   Convert disk image to disk image
       Given a disk image from another hypervisor that you want to convert to run on KVM, you have two options.
       The simplest way is to try:

        virt-v2v -i disk disk.img -o local -os /var/tmp

       where virt-v2v guesses everything about the input disk.img and (in this case) writes the converted result
       to /var/tmp.

       A more complex method is to write some libvirt XML describing the input guest (if you can get the source
       hypervisor to provide you with libvirt XML, then so much the better).  You can then do:

        virt-v2v -i libvirtxml guest-domain.xml -o local -os /var/tmp

       Since guest-domain.xml contains the path(s) to the guest disk image(s) you do not need to specify the
       name of the disk image on the command line.

       To convert a local disk image and immediately boot it in local qemu, do:

        virt-v2v -i disk disk.img -o qemu -os /var/tmp -oo qemu-boot

OPTIONS

       --help
           Display help.

       --bandwidth bps
       --bandwidth-file filename
           Some  input  methods are able to limit the network bandwidth they will use statically or dynamically.
           In the first variant this sets the bandwidth limit statically in bits per second.  Formats like "10M"
           may be used (meaning 10 megabits per second).

           In the second variant the bandwidth is limited dynamically from the content of the file (also in bits
           per second, in the same formats supported by  the  first  variant).   You  may  use  both  parameters
           together,  meaning:  first  limit  to  a  static rate, then you can create the file while virt-v2v is
           running to adjust the rate dynamically.

           This is only supported for:

           •   input from Xen

           •   input from VMware VMX when using the SSH transport method

           •   input from VDDK

           •   -i libvirtxml when using HTTP or HTTPS disks

           •   input from VMware vCenter server

           The options are silently ignored for other input methods.

       -b ...
       --bridge ...
           See --network below.

       --block-driver virtio-blk
       --block-driver virtio-scsi
           When choosing a block driver for Windows guests, prefer "virtio-blk" or "virtio-scsi".   The  default
           is "virtio-blk".

           Note this has no effect for Linux guests at the moment.  That may be added in future.

       --colors
       --colours
           Use  ANSI  colour sequences to colourize messages.  This is the default when the output is a tty.  If
           the output of the program is redirected to a file, ANSI colour sequences are disabled unless you  use
           this option.

       --compressed
           This is the same as -oo compressed.

       --echo-keys
           When  prompting  for keys and passphrases, virt-v2v normally turns echoing off so you cannot see what
           you are typing.  If you are not worried about Tempest attacks and there is no one else  in  the  room
           you can specify this flag to see what you are typing.

           Note  this options only applies to keys and passphrases for encrypted devices and partitions, not for
           passwords used to connect to remote servers.

       -i disk
           Set the input method to disk.

           In this mode you can read a virtual machine disk image with no metadata.  virt-v2v tries to guess the
           best default metadata.  This is usually adequate but you can get finer control  (eg.  of  memory  and
           vCPUs) by using -i libvirtxml instead.  Only guests that use a single disk can be imported this way.

       -i libvirt
           Set the input method to libvirt.  This is the default.

           In  this  mode  you  have  to specify a libvirt guest name or UUID on the command line.  You may also
           specify a libvirt connection URI (see -ic).

           See "Starting the libvirt system instance" below.

       -i libvirtxml
           Set the input method to libvirtxml.

           In this mode you have to pass a libvirt XML file on the command line.  This file is read in order  to
           get  metadata  about  the  source  guest (such as its name, amount of memory), and also to locate the
           input disks.  See "Minimal XML for -i libvirtxml option" below.

       -i local
           This is the same as -i disk.

       -i ova
           Set the input method to ova.

           In this mode you can read a VMware ova file.  Virt-v2v will read the ova manifest file and check  the
           vmdk  volumes for validity (checksums) as well as analyzing the ovf file, and then convert the guest.
           See virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).

       -i vmx
           Set the input method to vmx.

           In this mode you can read a VMware vmx file directly or over SSH.  This is useful when VMware VMs are
           stored on an NFS server which you can mount directly, or where you have access  by  SSH  to  an  ESXi
           hypervisor.  See virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).

       -ic libvirtURI
           Specify a libvirt connection URI to use when reading the guest.  This is only used when -i libvirt.

           Only  local  libvirt connections, VMware vCenter connections, or RHEL 5 Xen remote connections can be
           used.  Other remote libvirt connections will not work in general.

           See also virt-v2v-input-vmware(1), virt-v2v-input-xen(1).

       -if format
           For -i disk only, this specifies the format of the input disk image.  For  other  input  methods  you
           should specify the input format in the metadata.

       -io OPTION=VALUE
           Set  input  option(s)  related to the current input mode or transport.  To display short help on what
           options are available you can use:

            virt-v2v -it vddk -io "?"

       -io vddk-libdir=LIBDIR
           Set the VDDK library directory.  This directory should contain subdirectories called  include,  lib64
           etc., but do not include lib64 actually in the parameter.

           In  most  cases  this  parameter  is  required  when  using  the  -it  vddk  (VDDK)  transport.   See
           virt-v2v-input-vmware(1) for details.

       -io vddk-thumbprint=xx:xx:xx:...
           Set the thumbprint of the remote VMware server.

           This parameter is required when using the -it vddk (VDDK)  transport.   See  virt-v2v-input-vmware(1)
           for details.

       -io vddk-config=FILENAME
       -io vddk-cookie=COOKIE
       -io vddk-nfchostport=PORT
       -io vddk-port=PORT
       -io vddk-snapshot=SNAPSHOT-MOREF
       -io vddk-transports=MODE:MODE:...
           When using VDDK mode, these options are passed unmodified to the nbdkit(1) VDDK plugin.  Please refer
           to  nbdkit-vddk-plugin(1).   Do  not use these options unless you know what you are doing.  These are
           all optional.

       -ip filename
           Supply a file containing a password to be used when connecting to the target hypervisor.  If this  is
           omitted  then  the  input  hypervisor  may  ask for the password interactively.  Note the file should
           contain the whole password, without any trailing newline, and for security the file should have  mode
           0600 so that others cannot read it.

       -it ssh
           When using -i vmx, this enables the ssh transport.  See virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).

       -it vddk
           Use  VMware  VDDK  as a transport to copy the input disks.  See virt-v2v-input-vmware(1).  If you use
           this parameter then you may need to use other -io vddk* options to specify  how  to  connect  through
           VDDK.

       --key SELECTOR
           Specify a key for LUKS, to automatically open a LUKS device when using the inspection.

           --key NAME:key:KEY_STRING
           --key UUID:key:KEY_STRING
           --key all:key:KEY_STRING
               "NAME"  is the libguestfs device name (eg. "/dev/sda1").  "UUID" is the device UUID.  "all" means
               try the key against any encrypted device.

               Use the specified "KEY_STRING" as passphrase.

           --key NAME:file:FILENAME
           --key UUID:file:FILENAME
           --key all:file:FILENAME
               Read the passphrase from FILENAME.

           --key NAME:clevis
           --key UUID:clevis
           --key all:clevis
               Attempt passphrase-less unlocking for the device with Clevis, over the network.  Please refer  to
               "ENCRYPTED DISKS" in guestfs(3) for more information on network-bound disk encryption (NBDE).

               Note  that  if  any  such  option  is  present  on the command line, QEMU user networking will be
               automatically enabled for the libguestfs appliance.

       --keys-from-stdin
           Read key or passphrase parameters from stdin.  The default is to try to  read  passphrases  from  the
           user by opening /dev/tty.

           If  there  are multiple encrypted devices then you may need to supply multiple keys on stdin, one per
           line.

           Note --keys-from-stdin only applies to keys and passphrases for encrypted devices and partitions, not
           for passwords used to connect to remote servers.

       --mac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:network:out
       --mac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:bridge:out
           Map source NIC MAC address to a network or bridge.

           See "Networks and bridges" below.

       --mac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:ip:ipaddr[,gw[,len[,ns,ns,...]]]
           Force a particular interface (controlled by its MAC address) to have a static IP address after boot.

           The fields in the parameter are: "ipaddr" is the  IP  address.   "gw"  is  the  optional  gateway  IP
           address.   "len"  is  the  subnet  mask  length  (an integer).  The final parameters are zero or more
           nameserver IP addresses.

           This option can be supplied zero or more times.

           You only need to use this option for certain broken guests  such  as  Windows  which  are  unable  to
           preserve  MAC  to  static  IP address mappings automatically.  You don't need to use it if Windows is
           using DHCP.  It is currently ignored for Linux guests since they do not have this problem.

       --machine-readable
       --machine-readable=format
           This option is used to make the output more machine friendly when being  parsed  by  other  programs.
           See "Machine readable output" below.

       -n in:out
       -n out
       --network in:out
       --network out
       -b in:out
       -b out
       --bridge in:out
       --bridge out
           Map  network  (or  bridge)  called  "in"  to network (or bridge) called "out".  If no "in:" prefix is
           given, all other networks (or bridges) are mapped to "out".

           See "Networks and bridges" below.

       -o disk
           This is the same as -o local.

       -o glance
           This is a legacy option.  You should probably use -o openstack instead.

           Set the output method to OpenStack Glance.  In this mode the converted guest is uploaded  to  Glance.
           See virt-v2v-output-openstack(1).

       -o kubevirt
           Set  the  output method to kubevirt.  Note the way this mode works is experimental and will change in
           future.

           In this mode, the converted guest is written  to  a  local  directory  specified  by  -os  /dir  (the
           directory must exist).  The converted guest’s disks are written to:

            /dir/name-sda
            /dir/name-sdb
            [etc]

           and guest metadata is created in the associated YAML file:

            /dir/name.yaml

           where "name" is the guest name.

       -o libvirt
           Set the output method to libvirt.  This is the default.

           In  this  mode,  the  converted  guest is created as a libvirt guest.  You may also specify a libvirt
           connection URI (see -oc).

           See "Starting the libvirt system instance" below, and virt-v2v-output-local(1).

       -o local
           Set the output method to local.

           In this mode, the converted guest is written  to  a  local  directory  specified  by  -os  /dir  (the
           directory must exist).  The converted guest’s disks are written as:

            /dir/name-sda
            /dir/name-sdb
            [etc]

           and a libvirt XML file is created containing guest metadata:

            /dir/name.xml

           where "name" is the guest name.

       -o null
           Set the output method to null.

           The guest is converted and copied but the results are thrown away and no metadata is written.

       -o openstack
           Set the output method to OpenStack.  See virt-v2v-output-openstack(1).

       -o ovirt
           This is the same as -o rhv.

       -o ovirt-upload
           This is the same as -o rhv-upload.

       -o qemu
           Set the output method to qemu.

           This  is  similar  to  -o  local, except that a shell script is written which you can use to boot the
           guest in qemu.  The converted disks and shell script are written to the directory specified by -os.

           When using this output mode, you can also specify the -oo qemu-boot  option  which  boots  the  guest
           under qemu immediately.

       -o rhev
           This is the same as -o rhv.

       -o rhv
           Set the output method to rhv.

           The  converted  guest is written to a RHV Export Storage Domain.  The -os parameter must also be used
           to specify the location of the Export Storage Domain.  Note this does not actually import  the  guest
           into RHV.  You have to do that manually later using the UI.

           See virt-v2v-output-rhv(1).

       -o rhv-upload
           Set the output method to rhv-upload.

           The  converted  guest is written directly to a RHV Data Domain.  This is a faster method than -o rhv,
           but requires oVirt or RHV ≥ 4.2.

           See virt-v2v-output-rhv(1).

       -o vdsm
           Set the output method to vdsm.

           This  mode  is  similar  to  -o  rhv,  but  the  full  path  to  the  data  domain  must  be   given:
           /rhv/data-center/<data-center-uuid>/<data-domain-uuid>.   This  mode  is only used when virt-v2v runs
           under VDSM control.

       -oa sparse
       -oa preallocated
           Set the output file allocation mode.  The default is "sparse".

       -oc URI
           Specify a connection URI to use when writing the converted guest.

           For -o libvirt this is the libvirt URI.  Only local libvirt connections can be used.  Remote  libvirt
           connections will not work.  See virt-v2v-output-local(1) for further information.

       -of format
           When converting the guest, convert the disks to the given format.

           If not specified, then the input format is used.

       -on name
           Rename  the guest when converting it.  If this option is not used then the output name is the same as
           the input name.

       -oo OPTION=VALUE
           Set output option(s) related to the current output mode.  To display short help on what  options  are
           available you can use:

            virt-v2v -o rhv-upload -oo "?"

       -oo compressed
           For  outputs  which support qcow2 format (-of qcow2), this writes a compressed qcow2 file.  It is the
           equivalent to the -c option of qemu-img(1).

       -oo guest-id="ID"
           For -o openstack (virt-v2v-output-openstack(1)) only, set a guest ID which is saved  on  each  Cinder
           volume in the "virt_v2v_guest_id" volume property.

       -oo qemu-boot
           When using -o qemu only, this boots the guest immediately after virt-v2v finishes.

       -oo verify-server-certificate
       -oo verify-server-certificate="true|false"
           For  -o  openstack (virt-v2v-output-openstack(1)) only, this can be used to disable SSL certification
           validation when connecting to OpenStack by specifying -oo verify-server-certificate=false.

       -oo os-*=*
           For -o openstack (virt-v2v-output-openstack(1)) only, set  optional  OpenStack  authentication.   For
           example -oo os-username=NAME is equivalent to "openstack --os-username=NAME".

       -oo rhv-cafile=ca.pem
           For -o rhv-upload (virt-v2v-output-rhv(1)) only, the ca.pem file (Certificate Authority), copied from
           /etc/pki/ovirt-engine/ca.pem on the oVirt engine.

       -oo rhv-cluster="CLUSTERNAME"
           For  -o  rhv-upload  (virt-v2v-output-rhv(1))  only,  set the RHV Cluster Name.  If not given it uses
           "Default".

       -oo rhv-proxy
           For -o rhv-upload (virt-v2v-output-rhv(1)) only, proxy the upload  through  oVirt  Engine.   This  is
           slower  than  uploading  directly  to  the  oVirt node but may be necessary if you do not have direct
           network access to the nodes.

       -oo rhv-verifypeer
           For -o rhv-upload (virt-v2v-output-rhv(1)) only, verify the oVirt/RHV server’s identity  by  checking
           the server‘s certificate against the Certificate Authority.

       -oo server-id="NAME|UUID"
           For  -o openstack (virt-v2v-output-openstack(1)) only, set the name of the conversion appliance where
           virt-v2v is running.

       -oo vdsm-compat=0.10
       -oo vdsm-compat=1.1
           If -o vdsm and the output format is qcow2, then we add the qcow2 compat=0.10  option  to  the  output
           file for compatibility with RHEL 6 (see https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1145582).

           If -oo vdsm-compat=1.1 is used then modern qcow2 (compat=1.1) files are generated instead.

           Currently  -oo  vdsm-compat=0.10  is  the  default,  but this will change to -oo vdsm-compat=1.1 in a
           future version of virt-v2v (when we can assume that everyone is using a modern version of qemu).

           Note this option only affects -o vdsm output.  All other output modes  (including  -o  rhv)  generate
           modern qcow2 compat=1.1 files, always.

           If this option is available, then "vdsm-compat-option" will appear in the --machine-readable output.

       -oo vdsm-image-uuid=UUID
       -oo vdsm-vol-uuid=UUID
       -oo vdsm-vm-uuid=UUID
       -oo vdsm-ovf-output=DIR
           Normally  the  RHV  output  mode  chooses  random  UUIDs for the target guest.  However VDSM needs to
           control the UUIDs and passes these parameters when virt-v2v runs under VDSM control.  The  parameters
           control:

           •   the image directory of each guest disk (-oo vdsm-image-uuid) (this option is passed once for each
               guest disk)

           •   UUIDs for each guest disk (-oo vdsm-vol-uuid) (this option is passed once for each guest disk)

           •   the OVF file name (-oo vdsm-vm-uuid).

           •   the OVF output directory (default current directory) (-oo vdsm-ovf-output).

           The  format  of  UUIDs  is:  "12345678-1234-1234-1234-123456789abc"  (each  hex digit can be "0-9" or
           "a-f"), conforming to OSF DCE 1.1.

           These options can only be used with -o vdsm.

       -oo vdsm-ovf-flavour=flavour
           This option controls the format of the OVF generated at the end of conversion.  Currently  there  are
           two possible flavours:

           rhvexp
               The OVF format used in RHV export storage domain.

           ovirt
               The OVF format understood by oVirt REST API.

           For backward compatibility the default is rhvexp, but this may change in the future.

       -op file
           Supply  a  file  containing a password to be used when connecting to the target hypervisor.  Note the
           file should contain the whole password, without any trailing  newline,  and  for  security  the  file
           should have mode 0600 so that others cannot read it.

       -os storage
           The location of the storage for the converted guest.

           For -o libvirt, this is a libvirt directory pool (see "virsh pool-list") or pool UUID.

           For -o local and -o qemu, this is a directory name.  The directory must exist.

           For -o rhv-upload, this is the name of the destination Storage Domain.

           For -o openstack, this is the optional Cinder volume type.

           For -o rhv, this can be an NFS path of the Export Storage Domain of the form "<host>:<path>", eg:

            rhv-storage.example.com:/rhv/export

           The  NFS  export  must  be  mountable  and  writable by the user and host running virt-v2v, since the
           virt-v2v program has to actually mount it when it runs.  So you probably  have  to  run  virt-v2v  as
           "root".

           Or:  You  can  mount  the Export Storage Domain yourself, and point -os to the mountpoint.  Note that
           virt-v2v will still need to write to this remote directory, so virt-v2v will still  need  to  run  as
           "root".

           You will get an error if virt-v2v is unable to mount/write to the Export Storage Domain.

       --print-source
           Print  information  about  the  source guest and stop.  This option is useful when you are setting up
           network and bridge maps.  See "Networks and bridges".

       --qemu-boot
           This is the same as -oo qemu-boot.

       -q
       --quiet
           This disables progress bars and other unnecessary output.

       --root ask
       --root single
       --root first
       --root /dev/sdX
       --root /dev/VG/LV
           Choose the root filesystem to be converted.

           In the case where the virtual machine  is  dual-boot  or  multi-boot,  or  where  the  VM  has  other
           filesystems  that  look like operating systems, this option can be used to select the root filesystem
           (a.k.a. "C:" drive or /) of the operating system that is  to  be  converted.   The  Windows  Recovery
           Console,  certain attached DVD drives, and bugs in libguestfs inspection heuristics, can make a guest
           look like a multi-boot operating system.

           The default in virt-v2v ≤ 0.7.1 was --root single, which causes  virt-v2v  to  die  if  a  multi-boot
           operating system is found.

           Since  virt-v2v  ≥  0.7.2  the  default  is now --root ask: If the VM is found to be multi-boot, then
           virt-v2v will stop and list the possible root filesystems and  ask  the  user  which  to  use.   This
           requires that virt-v2v is run interactively.

           --root first  means  to  choose  the  first root device in the case of a multi-boot operating system.
           Since this is a heuristic, it may sometimes choose the wrong one.

           You can also name a specific root device, eg. --root /dev/sda2 would mean to use the second partition
           on the first hard drive.  If the named root device does not exist or  was  not  detected  as  a  root
           device, then virt-v2v will fail.

           Note  that  there  is a bug in grub which prevents it from successfully booting a multiboot system if
           virtio is enabled.  Grub is only able to boot  an  operating  system  from  the  first  virtio  disk.
           Specifically,  /boot  must be on the first virtio disk, and it cannot chainload an OS which is not in
           the first virtio disk.

       -v
       --verbose
           Enable verbose messages for debugging.

       -V
       --version
           Display version number and exit.

       --wrap
           Wrap error, warning, and informative messages.  This is the default when the output is a tty.  If the
           output of the program is redirected to a file, wrapping is disabled unless you use this option.

       -x  Enable tracing of libguestfs API calls.

NOTES

   Xen paravirtualized guests
       Older versions of virt-v2v could turn a Xen paravirtualized (PV) guest into a KVM guest by  installing  a
       new  kernel.  This version of virt-v2v does not attempt to install any new kernels.  Instead it will give
       you an error if there are only Xen PV kernels available.

       Therefore before conversion you should check that a regular kernel is installed.  For  some  older  Linux
       distributions, this means installing a kernel from the table below:

        RHEL 3         (Does not apply, as there was no Xen PV kernel)

        RHEL 4         i686 with > 10GB of RAM: install 'kernel-hugemem'
                       i686 SMP: install 'kernel-smp'
                       other i686: install 'kernel'
                       x86-64 SMP with > 8 CPUs: install 'kernel-largesmp'
                       x86-64 SMP: install 'kernel-smp'
                       other x86-64: install 'kernel'

        RHEL 5         i686: install 'kernel-PAE'
                       x86-64: install 'kernel'

        SLES 10        i586 with > 10GB of RAM: install 'kernel-bigsmp'
                       i586 SMP: install 'kernel-smp'
                       other i586: install 'kernel-default'
                       x86-64 SMP: install 'kernel-smp'
                       other x86-64: install 'kernel-default'

        SLES 11+       i586: install 'kernel-pae'
                       x86-64: install 'kernel-default'

        Windows        (Does not apply, as there is no Xen PV Windows kernel)

   Enabling virtio
       "Virtio"  is  the  name  for  a  set  of  drivers which make disk (block device), network and other guest
       operations work much faster on KVM.

       Older versions of virt-v2v could install these  drivers  for  certain  Linux  guests.   This  version  of
       virt-v2v  does  not  attempt  to  install new Linux kernels or drivers, but will warn you if they are not
       installed already.

       In order to enable virtio, and hence improve performance of the guest after conversion, you should ensure
       that the minimum versions of packages are installed before conversion, by consulting the table below.

        RHEL 3         No virtio drivers are available

        RHEL 4         kernel >= 2.5.9-89.EL
                       lvm2 >= 2.02.42-5.el4
                       device-mapper >= 1.02.28-2.el4
                       selinux-policy-targeted >= 1.17.30-2.152.el4
                       policycoreutils >= 1.18.1-4.13

        RHEL 5         kernel >= 2.6.18-128.el5
                       lvm2 >= 2.02.40-6.el5
                       selinux-policy-targeted >= 2.4.6-203.el5

        RHEL 6+        All versions support virtio

        Fedora         All versions support virtio

        SLES 11+       All versions support virtio

        SLES 10        kernel >= 2.6.16.60-0.85.1

        OpenSUSE 11+   All versions support virtio

        OpenSUSE 10    kernel >= 2.6.25.5-1.1

        Debian 6+      All versions support virtio

        Ubuntu 10.04+  All versions support virtio

        Windows        Drivers are installed from the ISO or directory pointed
                       to by the "VIRTIO_WIN" environment variable if present.
                       If the "VIRTIO_WIN" environment variable is absent
                       (which is the recommended setting), then libosinfo is
                       consulted first, for driver files that are locally
                       available on the conversion host.

   RHEL 4: SELinux relabel appears to hang forever
       In RHEL ≤ 4.7 there was a bug which causes SELinux relabelling to appear to hang forever at:

        *** Warning -- SELinux relabel is required. ***
        *** Disabling security enforcement.         ***
        *** Relabeling could take a very long time, ***
        *** depending on file system size.          ***

       In reality it is waiting for you to press a key (but there is no visual indication  of  this).   You  can
       either  hit  the  "[Return]" key, at which point the guest will finish relabelling and reboot, or you can
       install   policycoreutils   ≥   1.18.1-4.13   before   starting   the   v2v   conversion.     See    also
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=244636

   Debian and Ubuntu
       "warning: could not determine a way to update the configuration of Grub2"

       Currently,  virt-v2v  has  no  way  to set the default kernel in Debian and Ubuntu guests using GRUB 2 as
       bootloader.  This means that virt-v2v will not change the default kernel used for booting, even  in  case
       it  is not the best kernel available on the guest.  A recommended procedure is, before using virt-v2v, to
       check that the boot kernel is the best kernel available in the guest (for  example  by  making  sure  the
       guest is up-to-date).

       "vsyscall attempted with vsyscall=none"

       When  run on a recent Debian host virt-v2v may fail to convert guests which were created before 2013.  In
       the debugging output you will see a crash message similar to:

        vsyscall attempted with vsyscall=none ip:...
        segfault at ...

       This is caused because Debian removed support for running old binaries which  used  the  legacy  vsyscall
       page to call into the kernel.

       You can work around this problem by running this command before running virt-v2v:

        export LIBGUESTFS_APPEND="vsyscall=emulate"

       For more information, see https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1592061

   Windows
       System disk on a Dynamic Disk is not supported

       If  the Windows system disk (the drive containing "\windows") is located on a Dynamic Disk then it cannot
       be converted.  Data disks — that is, disks which are part of the guest but do not contain  parts  of  the
       Windows operating system — may be Dynamic Disks.

       See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/2140548.

       Windows  8 Fast Startup is incompatible with virt-v2v

       Guests  which  use  the  Windows  ≥  8  "Fast Startup" feature (or guests which are hibernated) cannot be
       converted with virt-v2v.  You will see an error:

        virt-v2v: error: unable to mount the disk image for writing. This has
        probably happened because Windows Hibernation or Fast Restart is being
        used in this guest. You have to disable this (in the guest) in order
        to use virt-v2v.

       As the message says, you need to boot the guest and disable the "Fast Startup" feature (Control  Panel  →
       Power  Options → Choose what the power buttons do → Change settings that are currently unavailable → Turn
       on fast startup), and shut down the guest, and then you will be able to convert it.

       For more information, see: "WINDOWS HIBERNATION AND WINDOWS 8 FAST STARTUP" in guestfs(3).

       Boot failure: 0x0000007B

       This boot failure is caused by Windows  being  unable  to  find  or  load  the  right  disk  driver  (eg.
       viostor.sys).  If you experience this error, here are some things to check:

       •   First ensure that the guest boots on the source hypervisor before conversion.

       •   Check  you  have the Windows virtio drivers available in /usr/share/virtio-win, and that virt-v2v did
           not print any warning about not being able to install virtio drivers.

           On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, you  will  need  to  install  the  signed  drivers  available  in  the
           "virtio-win"  package.   If you do not have access to the signed drivers, then you will probably need
           to disable driver signing in the boot menus.

       •   Check that you are presenting a virtio-blk interface (not virtio-scsi and not ide) to the guest.   On
           the qemu/KVM command line you should see something similar to this:

            ... -drive file=windows-sda,if=virtio ...

           In libvirt XML, you should see:

            <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>

       •   Check  that  Windows  Group  Policy  does  not  prevent the driver from being installed or used.  Try
           deleting Windows Group Policy before conversion.

       •   Check there is no anti-virus or other software which implements  Group  Policy-like  prohibitions  on
           installing or using new drivers.

       •   Enable boot debugging and check the viostor.sys driver is being loaded.

       OpenStack and Windows reactivation

       OpenStack  does  not  offer  stable  device / PCI addresses to guests.  Every time it creates or starts a
       guest, it regenerates the libvirt XML for that  guest  from  scratch.   The  libvirt  XML  will  have  no
       <address> fields.  Libvirt will then assign addresses to devices, in a predictable manner.  Addresses may
       change if any of the following are true:

       •   A new disk or network device has been added or removed from the guest.

       •   The version of OpenStack or (possibly) libvirt has changed.

       Because Windows does not like "hardware" changes of this kind, it may trigger Windows reactivation.

       This  can  also  prevent  booting  with  a  7B error [see previous section] if the guest has group policy
       containing "Device Installation Restrictions".

       Support for SHA-2 certificates in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2

       Later versions of the Windows virtio drivers are signed using SHA-2 certificates (instead of SHA-1).  The
       original shipping Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 did not understand SHA-2 certificates and  so  the
       Windows virtio drivers will not install properly.

       To      fix      this      you      must      apply      SHA-2     Code     Signing     Support     from:
       https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/security-updates/SecurityAdvisories/2015/3033929 before  converting  the
       guest.

       For further information see: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1624878

   Networks and bridges
       Guests  are  usually  connected  to one or more networks, and when converted to the target hypervisor you
       usually want to reconnect those networks at the destination.  The options --network, --bridge  and  --mac
       allow you to do that.

       If  you are unsure of what networks and bridges are in use on the source hypervisor, then you can examine
       the source metadata (libvirt XML,  vCenter  information,  etc.).   Or  you  can  run  virt-v2v  with  the
       --print-source  option  which  causes virt-v2v to print out the information it has about the guest on the
       source and then exit.

       In the --print-source output you will see a section showing the guest’s Network Interface Cards (NICs):

        $ virt-v2v [-i ...] --print-source name
        [...]
        NICs:
            Network "default" mac: 52:54:00:d0:cf:0e

       Bridges are special classes of network devices which are attached to a  named  external  network  on  the
       source hypervisor, for example:

        $ virt-v2v [-i ...] --print-source name
        [...]
        NICs:
            Bridge "br0"

       To  map  a  specific source bridge to a target network, for example "br0" on the source to "ovirtmgmt" on
       the target, use:

        virt-v2v [...] --bridge br0:ovirtmgmt

       To map every bridge to a target network, use:

        virt-v2v [...] --bridge ovirtmgmt

       Fine-grained mapping of guest NICs

       The --mac option gives you more control over the mapping, letting you map single NICs to either  networks
       or  bridges  on  the target.  For example a source guest with two NICs could map them individually to two
       networks called "mgmt" and "clientdata" like this:

        $ virt-v2v [...] \
           --mac 52:54:00:d0:cf:0e:network:mgmt \
           --mac 52:54:00:d0:cf:0f:network:clientdata

       Note that virt-v2v does not have the ability to change a guest’s MAC address.  The MAC address is part of
       the guest metadata and must remain the same on source and target hypervisors.  Most guests will  use  the
       MAC  address  to  set  up  persistent  associations  between  NICs and internal names (like "eth0"), with
       firewall settings, or even for other purposes like software licensing.

   Resource requirements
       Network

       The most important resource for virt-v2v appears to be network bandwidth.  Virt-v2v  should  be  able  to
       copy guest data at gigabit ethernet speeds or greater.

       Ensure  that the network connections between servers (conversion server, NFS server, vCenter, Xen) are as
       fast and as low latency as possible.

       Disk space

       Virt-v2v places potentially large  temporary  files  in  $VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR  (usually  /var/tmp,  see  also
       "ENVIRONMENT VARIBLES" below).  Using tmpfs is a bad idea.

       For  each  guest disk, an overlay is stored temporarily.  This stores the changes made during conversion,
       and is used as a cache.  The overlays are not particularly large - tens or low hundreds of megabytes  per
       disk is typical.  In addition to the overlay(s), input and output methods may use disk space, as outlined
       in the table below.

       -i ova
           This  temporarily  places  a  full  copy  of  the  uncompressed  source disks in $VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR (or
           /var/tmp).

       -o glance
           This temporarily places a full copy of the output disks in $VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR (or /var/tmp).

       -o local
       -o qemu
           You must ensure there is sufficient space in the output directory for the converted guest.

       See also "Minimum free space check in the host" below.

       VMware vCenter resources

       Copying from VMware vCenter is currently quite slow, but we believe this to  be  an  issue  with  VMware.
       Ensuring the VMware ESXi hypervisor and vCenter are running on fast hardware with plenty of memory should
       alleviate this.

       Compute power and RAM

       Virt-v2v  is not especially compute or RAM intensive.  If you are running many parallel conversions, then
       you may consider allocating one CPU core and 2 GB of RAM per running instance.

       Virt-v2v can be run in a virtual machine.

       Trimming

       Virt-v2v attempts to optimize the speed of conversion by ignoring guest  filesystem  data  which  is  not
       used.  This would include unused filesystem blocks, blocks containing zeroes, and deleted files.

       To  do this, virt-v2v issues a non-destructive fstrim(8) operation.  As this happens to an overlay placed
       over the guest data, it does not affect the source in any way.

       If this fstrim operation fails, you will see a warning, but virt-v2v will continue anyway.   It  may  run
       more slowly (in some cases much more slowly), because it is copying the unused parts of the disk.

       Unfortunately  support  for  fstrim  is  not  universal,  and  it also depends on specific details of the
       filesystem, partition alignment, and  backing  storage.   As  an  example,  NTFS  filesystems  cannot  be
       fstrimmed  if  they  occupy  a  partition  which  is not aligned to the underlying storage.  That was the
       default on Windows before Vista.  As another example, VFAT filesystems (used by UEFI  guests)  cannot  be
       trimmed at all.

       fstrim  support  in the Linux kernel is improving gradually, so over time some of these restrictions will
       be lifted and virt-v2v will work faster.

   Post-conversion tasks
       Guest network configuration

       Virt-v2v cannot currently reconfigure a guest’s network configuration.  If the  converted  guest  is  not
       connected  to  the same subnet as the source, its network configuration may have to be updated.  See also
       virt-customize(1).

       Converting a Windows guest

       When converting a Windows guests, the conversion process is split into two stages:

       1.  Offline conversion.

       2.  First boot.

       The guest will be bootable after the offline conversion stage,  but  will  not  yet  have  all  necessary
       drivers  installed  to  work  correctly.   These will be installed automatically the first time the guest
       boots.

       N.B. Take care not to interrupt the automatic driver installation process when logging in  to  the  guest
       for the first time, as this may prevent the guest from subsequently booting correctly.

   Free space for conversion
       Free space in the guest

       Virt-v2v  checks  there  is  sufficient  free  space  in  the guest filesystem to perform the conversion.
       Currently it checks:

       Linux root filesystem
           Minimum free space: 100 MB

       Linux /boot
           Minimum free space: 50 MB

           This is because we need to build a new initramfs for some Enterprise Linux conversions.

       Windows "C:" drive
           Minimum free space: 100 MB

           We may have to copy in many virtio drivers and guest agents.

       Any other mountable filesystem
           Minimum free space: 10 MB

       In addition to the actual free space, each filesystem is required to have at least 100 available inodes.

       Minimum free space check in the host

       You must have sufficient free space in the host directory used to store  large  temporary  overlays.   To
       find out which directory this is, use:

        $ df -h "`guestfish get-cachedir`"
        Filesystem        Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
        /dev/mapper/root   50G   40G  6.8G  86% /

       and  look under the "Avail" column.  Virt-v2v will refuse to do the conversion at all unless at least 1GB
       is available there.  You can change the directory that virt-v2v uses by setting $VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR.

       See also "Resource requirements" above and "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" below.

   Running virt-v2v as root or non-root
       Nothing in virt-v2v inherently needs root access, and it will run just fine as a non-root user.  However,
       certain external features may require either root or a special user:

       Mounting the Export Storage Domain
           When using -o rhv -os server:/esd virt-v2v has to have sufficient privileges to NFS mount the  Export
           Storage Domain from "server".

           You  can  avoid  needing  root  here by mounting it yourself before running virt-v2v, and passing -os
           /mountpoint instead, but first of all read the next section ...

       Writing to the Export Storage Domain as 36:36
           RHV-M cannot read files and directories from the Export  Storage  Domain  unless  they  have  UID:GID
           36:36.  You will see VM import problems if the UID:GID is not correct.

           When  you  run  virt-v2v  -o  rhv as root, virt-v2v attempts to create files and directories with the
           correct ownership.  If you run virt-v2v as non-root, it will probably still work, but you  will  need
           to manually change ownership after virt-v2v has finished.

       Writing to libvirt
           When  using  -o  libvirt,  you  may  need to run virt-v2v as root so that it can write to the libvirt
           system instance (ie.  "qemu:///system")  and  to  the  default  location  for  disk  images  (usually
           /var/lib/libvirt/images).

           You can avoid this by setting up libvirt connection authentication, see http://libvirt.org/auth.html.
           Alternatively, use -oc qemu:///session, which will write to your per-user libvirt instance.

           See also "Starting the libvirt system instance".

       Writing to Openstack
           Because  of  how  Cinder  volumes  are  presented  as /dev block devices, using -o openstack normally
           requires that virt-v2v is run as root.

       Writing to Glance
           This does not need root (in fact it probably won’t work), but  may  require  either  a  special  user
           and/or for you to source a script that sets authentication environment variables.  Consult the Glance
           documentation.

       Writing to block devices
           This normally requires root.  See the next section.

   Writing to block devices
       Some  output modes write to local files.  In general these modes also let you write to block devices, but
       before you run virt-v2v you may have to arrange for symbolic links to the desired block  devices  in  the
       output directory.

       For example if using -o local -os /dir then virt-v2v would normally create files called:

        /dir/name-sda     # first disk
        /dir/name-sdb     # second disk
        ...
        /dir/name.xml     # metadata

       If you wish the disks to be written to block devices then you would need to create /dir/name-sda (etc) as
       symlinks to the block devices:

        # lvcreate -L 10G -n VolumeForDiskA VG
        # lvcreate -L 6G -n VolumeForDiskB VG
        # ln -sf /dev/VG/VolumeForDiskA /dir/name-sda
        # ln -sf /dev/VG/VolumeForDiskB /dir/name-sdb

       Note  that you must precreate the correct number of block devices of the correct size.  Typically -of raw
       has to be used too, but other formats such as qcow2 can be useful occasionally so virt-v2v does not force
       you to use raw on block devices.

   Minimal XML for -i libvirtxml option
       When using the -i libvirtxml option, you have to supply some libvirt XML.  Writing this from  scratch  is
       hard, so the template below is helpful.

       Note  this  should only be used for testing and/or where you know what you're doing!  If you have libvirt
       metadata for the guest, always use that instead.

        <domain type='kvm'>
          <name> NAME </name>
          <memory>1048576</memory>
          <vcpu>2</vcpu>
          <os>
            <type>hvm</type>
            <boot dev='hd'/>
          </os>
          <features>
            <acpi/>
            <apic/>
            <pae/>
          </features>
          <devices>
            <disk type='file' device='disk'>
              <driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
              <source file='/path/to/disk/image'/>
              <target dev='hda' bus='ide'/>
            </disk>
            <interface type='network'>
              <mac address='52:54:00:01:02:03'/>
              <source network='default'/>
              <model type='rtl8139'/>
            </interface>
          </devices>
        </domain>

   Machine readable output
       The --machine-readable option can be used to make the output more machine friendly, which is useful  when
       calling virt-v2v from other programs, GUIs etc.

       There are two ways to use this option.

       Firstly use the option on its own to query the capabilities of the virt-v2v binary.  Typical output looks
       like this:

        $ virt-v2v --machine-readable
        virt-v2v
        libguestfs-rewrite
        colours-option
        vdsm-compat-option
        input:disk
        [...]
        output:local
        [...]
        convert:linux
        convert:windows

       A list of features is printed, one per line, and the program exits with status 0.

       The  "input:" and "output:" features refer to -i and -o (input and output mode) options supported by this
       binary.  The "convert:" features refer to guest types that this binary knows how to convert.

       Secondly use the option in conjunction with other options to make the regular program output more machine
       friendly.

       At the moment this means:

       1.  Progress bar messages can be parsed from stdout by looking for this regular expression:

            ^[0-9]+/[0-9]+$

       2.  The calling program should treat messages sent to stdout (except for progress bar messages) as status
           messages.  They can be logged and/or displayed to the user.

       3.  The calling program should treat messages sent to stderr as error messages.   In  addition,  virt-v2v
           exits with a non-zero status code if there was a fatal error.

       Virt-v2v  ≤  0.9.1  did  not  support  the  --machine-readable  option at all.  The option was added when
       virt-v2v was rewritten in 2014.

       It is possible to specify a format string for controlling the  output;  see  "ADVANCED  MACHINE  READABLE
       OUTPUT" in guestfs(3).

   Starting the libvirt system instance
        Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/virtqemud-sock': No such file or directory
        Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/virtqemud-sock-ro': Connection refused

       If  you  have  just installed libvirt and virt-v2v, then you may see the errors above.  This is caused by
       libvirt daemons that provide various services not running straight after installation.  (This may  depend
       on your distribution and vendor presets).

       To fix this on systemd-based distributions, do:

        systemctl isolate multi-user.target

       See also https://bugzilla.redhat.com/2182024.

FILES

       /usr/share/virtio-win
           (Optional)

           If  this  directory  is  present,  then  virtio  drivers  for  Windows guests will be found from this
           directory and installed in the guest during conversion.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       "VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR"
       "LIBGUESTFS_CACHEDIR"
           Location of the temporary directory used for  the  potentially  large  temporary  overlay  file.   If
           neither environment variable is set then /var/tmp is used.

           To  reliably  ensure  large temporary files are cleaned up (for example in case virt-v2v crashes) you
           should create a randomly named directory under /var/tmp,  set  "VIRT_V2V_TMPDIR"  to  point  to  this
           directory, then when virt-v2v exits remove the directory.

           See the "Disk space" section above.

       "VIRT_TOOLS_DATA_DIR"
           This can point to the directory containing data files used for Windows conversion.

           Normally you do not need to set this.  If not set, a compiled-in default will be used (something like
           /usr/share/virt-tools).

           This directory may contain the following files:

           rhsrvany.exe
               (Required when doing conversions of Windows guests)

               This  is  the  RHSrvAny  Windows binary, used to install a "firstboot" script in the guest during
               conversion of Windows guests.

               See also: "https://github.com/rwmjones/rhsrvany"

           pnp_wait.exe
               (Recommended when doing conversions of Windows guests)

               This tool waits for newly  installed  Windows  devices  to  become  available  before  trying  to
               configure them, for example to set network configuration.  It is part of the RHSrvAny project.

           pvvxsvc.exe
               This  is a Windows binary shipped with SUSE VMDP, used to install a "firstboot" script in Windows
               guests.  It is an alternative to RHSrvAny.

       "VIRTIO_WIN"
           This is an override for where virtio drivers for Windows are searched for.  It can be a directory  or
           point to virtio-win.iso (CD ROM image containing drivers).

           If unset, then we look for drivers via whichever of these methods succeeds first:

           "osinfo-db"
               Load  osinfo data from the default paths, and attempt to find drivers via libosinfo lookup.  This
               is the preferred method.

           /usr/share/virtio-win/virtio-win.iso
               The ISO containing virtio drivers for Windows.

           /usr/share/virtio-win
               The exploded tree of virtio drivers for Windows.  This is usually  incomplete,  hence  the  least
               preferred method.

           See "Enabling virtio".

       For other environment variables, see "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" in guestfs(3).

OTHER TOOLS

       engine-image-uploader(8)
           Variously called "engine-image-uploader", "ovirt-image-uploader" or "rhevm-image-uploader", this tool
           allows  you  to copy a guest from one oVirt or RHV Export Storage Domain to another.  It only permits
           importing a guest that was previously exported from another oVirt/RHV instance.

       import-to-ovirt.pl
           This script can be used to import guests that  already  run  on  KVM  to  oVirt  or  RHV.   For  more
           information, see this blog posting by the author of virt-v2v:

           https://rwmj.wordpress.com/2015/09/18/importing-kvm-guests-to-ovirt-or-rhev/#content

SEE ALSO

       virt-p2v(1),      virt-v2v-inspector(1),     virt-v2v-in-place(1),     virt-customize(1),     virt-df(1),
       virt-filesystems(1),   virt-sparsify(1),   virt-sysprep(1),   guestfs(3),   guestfish(1),    qemu-img(1),
       engine-image-uploader(8), import-to-ovirt.pl, nbdkit(1), nbdkit-vddk-plugin(1), http://libguestfs.org/.

AUTHORS

       Matthew Booth

       Cédric Bosdonnat

       Laszlo Ersek

       Tomáš Golembiovský

       Shahar Havivi

       Richard W.M. Jones

       Roman Kagan

       Mike Latimer

       Nir Soffer

       Pino Toscano

       Xiaodai Wang

       Ming Xie

       Tingting Zheng

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2009-2022 Red Hat Inc.

LICENSE

       This  program  is  free  software;  you  can  redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License,  or
       (at your option) any later version.

       This  program  is  distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
       the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public
       License for more details.

       You  should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write
       to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.

BUGS

       To     get      a      list      of      bugs      against      libguestfs,      use      this      link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       To       report       a       new       bug       against       libguestfs,      use      this      link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       When reporting a bug, please supply:

       •   The version of libguestfs.

       •   Where you got libguestfs (eg. which Linux distro, compiled from source, etc)

       •   Describe the bug accurately and give a way to reproduce it.

       •   Run libguestfs-test-tool(1) and paste the complete, unedited output into the bug report.

virt-v2v-2.4.0                                     2024-04-01                                        virt-v2v(1)