
Change-Id: I694301758f7f85290d4c9f9b01fbd1924b02b476 Implements: blueprint image-guide-rst
2.3 KiB
Converting between image formats
Converting images from one format to another is generally straightforward.
qemu-img convert: raw, qcow2, qed, vdi, vmdk, vhd
The qemu-img convert
command can do conversion between
multiple formats, including qcow2
, qed
,
raw
, vdi
, vhd
, and
vmdk
.
Image format | Argument to qemu-img |
---|---|
QCOW2 (KVM, Xen) | qcow2 |
QED (KVM) | qed |
raw | raw |
VDI (VirtualBox) | vdi |
VHD (Hyper-V) | vpc |
VMDK (VMware) | vmdk |
This example will convert a raw image file named
image.img
to a qcow2 image file.
$ qemu-img convert -f raw -O qcow2 image.img image.qcow2
Run the following command to convert a vmdk image file to a raw image file.
$ qemu-img convert -f vmdk -O raw image.vmdk image.img
Run the following command to convert a vmdk image file to a qcow2 image file.
$ qemu-img convert -f vmdk -O qcow2 image.vmdk image.qcow2
Note
The -f format
flag is optional. If omitted,
qemu-img
will try to infer the image format.
When converting an image file with Windows, ensure the virtio driver is installed. Otherwise, you will get a blue screen when launching the image due to lack of the virtio driver. Another option is to set the image properties as below when you update the image in glance to avoid this issue, but it will reduce performance significantly.
$ glance image-update --property hw_disk_bus='ide' image_id
VBoxManage: VDI (VirtualBox) to raw
If you've created a VDI image using VirtualBox, you can convert it to
raw format using the VBoxManage
command-line tool that ships with
VirtualBox. On Mac OS X, and Linux, VirtualBox stores images by default
in the ~/VirtualBox VMs/
directory. The following example
creates a raw image in the current directory from a VirtualBox VDI
image.
$ VBoxManage clonehd ~/VirtualBox\ VMs/image.vdi image.img --format raw