Assessment
4 TopicsAzure Migrate | CSV import in Preview | keeps spinning without working
I am wondering if anyone has managed to get the Azure Migrate CSV file import feature to work correctly? It is documented here https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/migrate/tutorial-assess-import I imported 20 servers about 4 days back, and it was supposed to let me create an assessment 10 mins after import was complete. It's still spinning with "Discovery is in process". Is there a way to look at the logs under the hood to figure out what's wrong? Current viewMicrosoft Azure Hub-Spoke model by Enterprise Design part 3 of 4 Data Migration
Hyper-V Clusters front tier with SQL Clusters in the Backend SQL assessment and Data Migration to Azure This blogpost is about SQL assessment and Data Migration to your Azure design in the Cloud in a secure way. Before you begin with your Data assessment and getting your workloads together with Microsoft Azure ServiceMaps, I wrote these blogposts about Microsoft Azure HUB – Spoke model by Enterprise Design : Microsoft Azure Hub-Spoke model by Enterprise Design 1 of 4 Microsoft Azure Policy and BluePrints Overview (Extra Blogpost) Microsoft Azure Hub-Spoke model by Enterprise Design 2 of 4 “Lift and Shift” For Microsoft SQL databases there are different Azure Solutions in the Cloud possible, but first you need to know which versions of SQL do you have and how are they running now in your Datacenter? Read more on my Blogpost here about Azure Data MigrationStart your move to Azure with Azure Migrate
Today the Azure Migrate service became generally available. The service allows you to discover virtual machines in your on-premises environment running in VMWare and provides guidance and insights to help you move to those VMs running your applications to Azure. Azure Migrate allows to plan your move to Azure considering three primary dimensions: Readiness - is the VM and application suitable to run in an Azure VM Right-sizing - what's the correct Azure VM to use Cost - what's it going to cost to run the VM in Azure The Azure Migrate team announced the milestone in this blog post today. Learn more about the Azure Migrate service where you can see review the capabilities of the service, gain access the service details, and try it out in a lab.Welcome to the Azure Migration Tech Community
Welcome to the new Azure Migration IT Forum. Here we will discuss, disclosure and talk about all things migration. Migrating to Azure is not simply lifting and shifting your existing VM’s (although you can easily do this if you want), there are many tools and services available to help you discover, right-size and optimize your VM’s before they more to Azure – saving you time and money. However, migration is not all about Virtual Machines. Much of the time you are looking at an end-to-end Application, including app services, data, and infrastructure tiers. Azure migration services are there to help you for all scenarios – app migration, data migration and VM migration with new tools, services and a strong partner ecosystem. To kick start your journey, on April 12 th we released a new Azure TCO calculator. The tool enables you to understand initial cost comparison in migrating your on-premises workloads to Azure. Through one of three input mechanisms, you can model the cost of your on-premises physical and virtual servers. Further inputs for storage and networking usage offers deeper costing analysis, providing an initial comparison report to identify savings when moving your on-premises environment to Azure. Getting stated is easy, simply choose the best way to input your sever and workload data Manual Import - the manual assessment enables you to enter in information about your server environment such as procs, cores and memory directly into the Azure TCO analysis tool. Custom Import - custom inventory assessment enables you to use your existing discovery tools output, providing the Azure TCO calculator with the required data to enable the assessment. In this scenario, you would use the custom inventory template provided by the Azure TCO tool, and import your existing data to this. Automated discovery and import - the automated inventory assessment uses the Microsoft Assessment and Planning toolkit to automatically collect your server hardware configuration, and enable this for input into the Azure TCO tool. You can access the new TCO tool at http://tco.microsoft.com/. Check out the complete https://aka.ms/migrate_tcodoc for a step-by-step screen captured walkthrough for using the TCO tool, including discovery and analysis. Also you can view this in action with our https://aka.ms/migrate_tcovideo. If you have any questions, issues or problems with the new TCO tool, make sure you post them here. We have experts on standby awaiting your question and will get back to you promptly! I hope you see terrific value in the tools for migration to Azure. In the coming weeks, we will delve more into existing migration tools such as Azure Site Recovery, excellent partner offerings for discovery and right-sizing, as well as new serviced we are on the verge of announcing! Many thanks Michael Leworthy