Hello Richard,
unfortunately upgrading virt-v2v is not an option. Would be nice, but
integration with vdsm is not yet ready for that options.
On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 11:06 AM, Richard W.M. Jones <rjones(a)redhat.com> wrote:
[cut]
I don't know why it slowed down, but I'm pretty sure it's
got nothing
to do with the version of oVirt/RHV. Especially in the initial phase
where it's virt-v2v reading the guest from vCenter. Something must
have changed or be different in the test and production environments.
Are you converting the same guests? virt-v2v is data-driven, so
different guests require different operations, and those can take
different amount of time to run.
I'm not migrating the same guests, i'm migrating different guest, but
most of them share the same os baseline.
Most of these vms are from the same RHEL 7 template and have little
data difference (few gigs).
Do you know which is the performance impact on vcenter? I'd like to
tune as best as possible the vcenter to improve the migration time.
We have to migrate ~300 guests, and our maintenance window is very
short. We don't want continue the migration for months.
Luca
--
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Luca 'remix_tj' Lorenzetto,
http://www.remixtj.net ,
<lorenzetto.luca(a)gmail.com>