Thanks for your responses.  It sounds that the better option is to build a
new VM (Hyper-V Supported).  Some questions ..

*  When I build the VM, what type of configuration must I do?  Is it just
the OS, or do I also install RT (what version)?

*  What directories (objects) must I backup, in order to properly restore
to the new VM?
*  Do any of you have the process documented, I remember reading that some
of you have done this a zillion times :) ?

Thanks,

AVazquez




On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:56 PM, Mike Coakley <[email protected]> wrote:

>  Hi Alberto,
>
> We use RT on Hyper-V. We built a new VM instance and performed a data
> migration for our physical implementation. We did this because our flavor
> and version of Linux was not supported well on Hyper-V. The newer kernels
> are pretty good and I saw very good performance. Basically make sure your
> distro supports the synthetic drivers for hyper-v and you will be good to
> go.
>
> Mike
>
> On Oct 1, 2013, 12:32 PM, Alberto Vazquez wrote:
>
>   All,
>
> I have a physical server running RT, and I want to virtualize it to
> Hyper-V.  Can some provide some guidance on what will the best process to
> follow?  Or, are there any potential issues?
>
> Thanks,
> AVazquez
>
>


-- 
Walk in faith!
Alberto Vazquez-Dzul
Email:  [email protected]
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