
If you get an error on the OVF specification conformance or virtual hardware compliance, click Retry.Provide a name for the imported VM and click Save.Select Choose File and select the exported OVA.The VM is now being exported as an OVA which we can import into VMware Fusion Go to File, Export Appliance and select the VM to export.In this process, we are going to export the VirtualBox VM to OVA format which we will be importing in VMware Fusion and ESXi. Step-by-step Migration from VirtualBox to VMware You can backup your VMware VMs for free with no feature restriction. Finally, there are tons of third party solutions in the market that support this type of migration. OVA is an open standard for packaging and distributing virtual appliances and is widely supported. VirtualBox can export a Virtual Machine to an Open Virtualization Format Archive (OVA). There are multiple ways to migrate a Virtual Machine between hypervisors and various tools can play a role. To test migration from Oracle VirtualBox to VMware ESXi, there is also a server running ESXi 6.7 U3 available: VMware Fusion 11.5.1 is also running on the MacBook Pro: Oracle VirtualBox 6.1 is installed on a MacBook Pro and an Ubuntu 18.04 Virtual Machine is running inside VirtualBox: The environment used to detail the steps required for this migration is fairly straightforward. This blogpost will explain how to migrate Virtual Machines from Oracle VirtualBox to VMware Fusion and to VMware ESXi.

Software developers also make frequent use of type 2 hypervisors because they can spin up isolated Dev/Test environments very easily. For example, you can install Windows on a MacBook inside a type 2 hypervisor. Type 2 hypervisors are often used on workstations or laptops to spin up additional machines with isolated operating systems. KVM and VMware ESXi are examples of type 1 hypervisors.

VMware Workstation for Windows/Linux and VMware Fusion for MacOS are type 2 hypervisors.Ī “Type 1 hypervisor” runs directly on bare metal. VirtualBox is a so-called “Type 2 hypervisor”, which means it runs on top of an operating system such as Windows, Linux or macOS. Since then, the product is known as Oracle VirtualBox.

Sun Microsystems acquired Innotek in 2008 and Oracle bought Sun in 2010. VirtualBox is a free and open-source hypervisor for x86 virtualization that was originally released by Innotek GmbH in 2007. One of those is Oracle VirtualBox for example. There are still other vendors out there that also deliver x86 virtualization solutions.

VMware has been dominating the x86 virtualization market for years. When we talk about Virtual Machines (VMs) we always talk about VMware VMs.
