This is a KVM native OVA.  Other than pulling apart the archive and importing 
the disks directly, then attaching the disk to a VM, is there a more efficient 
process?? 

Thanks 

> On Apr 25, 2017, at 12:02 PM, Arik Hadas <aha...@redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> If that's a VMware-compatible OVA then a better approach (the approach that 
> was previously proposed requires you to convert the vmdk disks separately) 
> would be to copy the OVA file to one of the hosts managed by oVirt, change 
> its permissions to vdsm:kvm, and import it using the import dialog in the 
> virtual machines tab.
> 
>> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 6:34 PM, Andy <farkey_2...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> Ahh makes sense,  will give that a try.  thank you much for the info. 
>> 
>> 
>> On Tuesday, April 25, 2017, 8:21:43 AM EDT, Fred Rolland 
>> <froll...@redhat.com> wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> You can upload a disk in the "disks" tab.
>> You will need to create the VM manually, and attached the disk to it.
>> 
>> Regards,
>> 
>> Fred
>> 
>> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 3:06 PM, Andy Kress <farkey_2...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> All,
>> 
>> I am using the latest version of Ovirt 4.1.1.8-1 running in CentOS 7.3 and 
>> would like to import an OVA.  Since it appears the image-uploader utility is 
>> deprecated, does anyone have information on how to accomplish this?
>> I cannot import it through the UI directly and rather than importing the OVA 
>> to a VMWARE environment and pulling it in, I would like to know how to 
>> directly do this.
>> 
>> Thanks
>> 
>> AK
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