+$Id$
+
virt-p2v : P2V ("physical to virtual") migration tool
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright (C) 2007 Red Hat Inc.
+ http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-p2v/
+
+Binaries
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Binaries are available from the website (live CD images which can be
+burned directly to a CD and booted on the p2v candidate machine).
+
+http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-p2v/
+
+Building
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Requirements:
+ * livecd-creator (on Fedora the package is 'livecd-tools')
+ * qemu (only for testing)
+
+(1) Edit Makefile - there is some general configuration at the
+ top which you may want to change.
+
+(2) 'make build' will build an ISO image called virt-p2v-$VERSION.iso
+
+(3) Burn the image on to a CD using standard tools.
+
+Booting from USB device
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+If you wish to boot from a USB keydrive, use the livecd-iso-to-disk
+tool:
+
+ livecd-iso-to-disk virt-p2v-$VERSION.iso /dev/sdX1
+
+(Replace /dev/sdX1 with the actual USB device).
+
+In my experience I also had to set up a suitable MBR:
+
+ cat /usr/lib/syslinux/mbr.bin > /dev/sdX
+
+Running
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Boot the candidate machine from the live CD or USB keydrive.
+
+You will need to have network access to another machine where it will
+save the virtual disk images. That machine must have ssh access (sshd
+service running). Note that the target machine is usually the Xen
+host, but it doesn't need to be: you could copy the images to a
+staging machine, and later copy them over to the Xen host.
+
+Note that the live CD doesn't modify any data on the candidate
+machine.
+
+Answer the questions. There is a tutorial and explanation of some of
+the questions on the website which you may wish to follow:
+http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-p2v/
+
+While the live CD is booted a shell is available on other virtual
+consoles. Go to a virtual console using [ALT] [F2] and log in as root
+with no password.
+
+If it works, the result will be a configuration file and disk images
+for each block device (hard disk) from the candidate machine, which
+should boot directly or with the minimum of changes.
+
+Booting P2V candidate under Xen
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ # virsh define p2v-foo-2008MMDDHHMM.conf
+ # virsh start foo
+
+Testing
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+If you want to test the live CD without actually P2V-ing a real
+server, then you can run the ISO directly in qemu. (To do any sort of
+realistic testing you will also need an operating system image,
+eg. from /var/lib/xen/images, to experiment with). For example:
+
+ $ cp /var/lib/xen/images/rhel5gax32fv.img .
+ $ make boot HDA=rhel5gax32fv.img
+ qemu -m 512 -cdrom virt-p2v-0.1.iso -boot d -hda rhel5gax32fv.img