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Migration checklist

The VMware migration checklist.

Every item your team should verify before, during, and after the move, from the first inventory export to the last decommissioned host. Print it, assign owners, check boxes.

Migrations don't fail because the tooling breaks. They fail because something nobody wrote down, an undocumented dependency, an untested restore, a rollback plan that existed only in someone's head, surfaces at 2 a.m. on cutover night. This checklist is the writing-it-down part. Pair it with the phase-by-phase timeline and the cost guide.

Pre-migration

1. Inventory everything

  • ☐  Export a complete VM inventory: name, vCPU, RAM, provisioned/used storage, OS and version, owner, business function
  • ☐  Flag legacy OSes (Windows 2008/2012, old RHEL/CentOS), they constrain target-platform choices
  • ☐  Capture host details: CPU model, core counts, age, warranty status
  • ☐  Document non-VM dependencies: physical servers, appliances, USB dongles, licensing servers
  • ☐  Record per-VM performance baselines (CPU, memory, IOPS, latency) for post-migration comparison

2. Map dependencies

  • ☐  Run dependency discovery (netflow/agent-based) for at least 2–4 weeks to catch monthly jobs
  • ☐  Document inter-VM communication and app-tier groupings, these define your migration waves
  • ☐  Identify hard-coded IPs, hostnames, and certificates that break on re-IP
  • ☐  Interview app owners; the diagram always misses something a human knows

3. Audit licensing

  • ☐  Confirm exact VMware subscription/SnS expiry dates and any auto-renew clauses (see licensing guide)
  • ☐  Count physical cores per host, your Broadcom quote and your exit math both depend on it
  • ☐  Inventory guest licensing tied to the platform: Windows Server, SQL, Oracle (core-count sensitive!)
  • ☐  Check third-party tool entitlements (backup, monitoring, AV) for target-platform support

4. Backup & DR plan

  • ☐  Verify current backups are complete and actually restorable, test a restore now, not during cutover
  • ☐  Take a full backup baseline of every VM immediately before its wave
  • ☐  Confirm backup software supports the target platform (or select replacement)
  • ☐  Document current RTO/RPO per workload and confirm the target design meets them

5. Validate the target

  • ☐  Target platform selected against real requirements, not demos (comparison matrix)
  • ☐  Target environment built, patched, and monitored before the first VM moves
  • ☐  Network connectivity, VLANs, firewall rules, and DNS tested end to end
  • ☐  Storage performance benchmarked against source baselines
  • ☐  If using a managed provider: SLA, exit terms, and compliance attestations reviewed (provider directory)

6. Pick the pilot & define rollback

  • ☐  Pilot group selected: representative but low-blast-radius (dev/test plus one tolerant prod app)
  • ☐  Written rollback criteria per wave: what failure triggers rollback, who decides, within what time box
  • ☐  Rollback mechanics tested, actually fail back one pilot VM on purpose
  • ☐  Success criteria defined per wave and signed by app owners in advance

During migration

7. Run the cutover runbook

  • ☐  Per-wave runbook with timed steps, named owners, and decision points, rehearsed on the pilot
  • ☐  Maintenance windows communicated to users and customers in advance
  • ☐  Final replication sync verified before each cutover
  • ☐  DNS TTLs lowered ahead of cutover day
  • ☐  Source VMs powered off, not deleted, and locked against accidental restart
  • ☐  Monitor source and target for replication lag and performance during each wave
  • ☐  Keep the rollback path live until the wave's validation gate passes
  • ☐  Log every issue and resolution as you go, wave 1's problems are wave 3's prevention

Post-migration validation

8. Prove it works

  • ☐  Every VM passing health checks; app owners sign off against the pre-agreed success criteria
  • ☐  Performance compared to pre-migration baselines, with deltas explained
  • ☐  Backup jobs running and a test restore completed on the new platform
  • ☐  DR failover/failback tested end to end
  • ☐  Security scan and compliance checks (PCI/HIPAA/CMMC scope) on the new environment

9. Close it out

  • ☐  Old VMware hosts decommissioned after the agreed hold period (keep a final cold backup)
  • ☐  License termination/non-renewal notice sent to Broadcom or your reseller before the auto-renew date
  • ☐  Monitoring, alerting, and CMDB updated to the new platform
  • ☐  Runbooks and documentation rewritten for the new stack; team training completed
  • ☐  Actual costs captured vs. budget, close the loop on the business case

The wave-gate cheat sheet

GateMust be true before proceedingOwner
Pilot → Wave 1Pilot VMs validated; runbook timed; rollback tested for realProject lead
Between wavesPrior wave signed off by app owners; issues triaged; backups greenApp owners + ops
Final wave (crown jewels)All prior waves stable 1+ week; DR tested; exec sign-offIT leadership
DecommissionAll validation complete; hold period elapsed; cold backup archivedIT leadership

Want a second set of eyes on your plan, or providers who'll execute it under SLA? Start with a free assessment, and use the calculator to budget the project first.

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