Sorry about the editorial comment.  It's really a left-handed plea for help.  
When the P2V fails, it apparently deletes everything it set up, so there is no guest to
run virt-inspector.  
Where do I export LIBGUESTFS_TRACE=1?  AFAIK, there isn't any interactive shell where
I can do this.  I edit virt-v2v.conf, boot the source physical machine from the CD, and
click some mouse buttons.  That launches virt-p2v-server on the back end in the conversion
server.  Is there a hook someplace in virt-p2v-server or maybe virt-v2v.conf?  And where
does the output go?
Does it make sense to export that variable in an interactive shell and then launch
virt-p2v-server by hand?  Searching for "TRACE" in virt-p2v-server shows no
occurrences.  But maybe virt-p2v-server runs an executable program that looks at that
variable?  Should I still be using Fedora 14 for conversion server or is it better now to
try with Fedora 16?
- Greg
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard W.M. Jones [mailto:rjones@redhat.com] 
Sent: Saturday, November 19, 2011 1:59 AM
To: Greg Scott
Cc: Fredy Hernández; libguestfs(a)redhat.com
Subject: Re: [Libguestfs] Virtio-win RPM?
On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 04:17:53PM -0600, Greg Scott wrote:
 But c'mon - every Windows system in the world has the
directories
 mentioned below.  This cannot be the first P2V attempt on the planet
 earth from a Windows system to RHEV. 
Asserting this isn't helping anyone to diagnose the problem.
Try:
 - enabling tracing (export LIBGUESTFS_TRACE=1) and providing the
   complete output
 - run virt-inspector on the guest, if there is a guest
Rich.
-- 
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat 
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
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