On Mon, Feb 23, 2015 at 10:49 AM, Mario Lobo <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Fernando;
>
> First thanks for the reply.
>
> I don't know about OVF format well but unless it does something to the
> booting mechanism, I believe I would be stuck where I am now.
>

What I mean is that OVF is not just "a container format" or a virtual hard
disk format, it also specifies PARAMETERS of the VM,
in other words, the HDD parameters, memory settings, and so on, which is
added into a XML file. So by exporting to OVF / OVA (IF Hyper-V supports
such export option) then it would help maintain the same VM config
parameters.

Having said that, try changing the disk interface from SATA to IDE and see
if that helps.
But I'm shooting in the dark here as I never used Hyper-V myself.

But in other instances, changing the HDD interface of the VM from SATA to
IDE helps.

Let us know if you get it to work.

FC
-- 
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act
- George Orwell
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