I would set up a new virtual center and add this to Cloudstack and then one by 
one export and import your VMs in to Cloudstack one by one. I would definitely 
recommend not updating the database or importing your existing virtual center 
in to cloudstack. The export format will need to be OVA. You should not use the 
same virtual center that you manage with Cloudstack. Importing them this way 
means Cloudstack will track the life cycle of the VMs however the downside 
would be you will have a template for each VM you import which will inevitably 
take up space on your secondary NFS server and the ESX datastore. Depending on 
your size of VMs, depends on how long this will take and you might have to 
tweak some global settings if the OVA templates sizes are large.

It would be good if you could import them straight in  but I do not think this 
is possible. 


Here is an extract from the installation guide.

6.4.2. Add Cluster: vSphere

Host management for vSphere is done through a combination of vCenter and the 
CloudStack admin UI. CloudStack requires that all hosts be in a CloudStack 
cluster, but the cluster may consist of a single host. As an administrator you 
must decide if you would like to use clusters of one host or of multiple hosts. 
Clusters of multiple hosts allow for features like live migration. Clusters 
also require shared storage such as NFS or iSCSI.
For vSphere servers, we recommend creating the cluster of hosts in vCenter and 
then adding the entire cluster to CloudStack. Follow these requirements:

    Do not put more than 8 hosts in a vSphere cluster
    Make sure the hypervisor hosts do not have any VMs already running before 
you add them to CloudStack.


Oliver Leach
Platform Architect
InstaCompute

-----Original Message-----
From: venkatesh.a [mailto:venkates...@dmxtechnologies.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 02, 2013 11:07 AM
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Subject: RE: Porting VMWare virtual setup into CloudStack

Hi 

        In our office we are having VMWare EsXi two Servers with multiple VM's 
managed by VCenter. Can we manage Virtual Machines CloudStack by installing it 
in one of the Virtual Machines.

Thanks  in Advance

Best Regards

Venkatesh.A

-----Original Message-----
From: rohityada...@gmail.com [mailto:rohityada...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Rohit 
Yadav
Sent: Monday, March 25, 2013 7:22 PM
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org; venkates...@dmxtechnologies.com
Subject: Re: Porting VMWare virtual setup into CloudStack

Instances yes. Overall cloud, that will take some time and energy, and a lot of 
hacking, there was a proposal sometime back to import existing hosts and 
instances to CloudStack which was never implemented, maybe in future.

Longer way: For each instances, export ova, deploy/start CloudStack, upload ova 
and start instances in CloudStack.

HTH.

On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 7:20 PM, venkatesh.a <venkates...@dmxtechnologies.com> 
wrote:
> Hi
>
>
>
>                 How can I convert existing VMWare virtual setup to 
> CloudStack. Is it possible port ?
>
>
>
> Thanks and Regards
>
>
> Venkatesh.A
>
>
>

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