Scripted Removal Of Non-present Hardware After A P2V

June 11th, 2011 by jason Leave a reply »

After converting a physical machine to a virtual machine, it is considered a best practice to remove unneeded applications, software, services, and device drivers which were tied to the physical machine but no longer applicable to the present day virtual machine.  Performing this task from time to time manually isn’t too bad but at large scale, a manual process becomes inefficient.  There are tools available which will automate the process of removing unneeded device drivers (sometimes referred to as ghost hardware).  A former colleage put together a scripted solution for Windows VMs which I’m sharing here. 

Copy the .zip file to the virtual machine local hard drive, extract it, and follow the instructions in the readme.txt file.  I have not thoroughly tested the tool.  No warranties – use at your own risk.  I would suggest using it on a test machine first to become comfortable with the process before using it on production machines or using on a large scale basis.

Download: remnonpresent.zip (719KB)

Advertisement

No comments

  1. Andy says:

    Jason

    A very big thank you for sharing this.

    Andy

  2. Fletch says:

    Thanks for sharing – was looking at the logic:
    REM Remove non-present devices
    devcon find * > .\find.txt
    devcon findall * > .\findall.txt
    comm -3 .\find.txt .\findall.txt > .\nonpresent.txt

    – how safe is this?
    I see it generated 328 items to be removed from my test VM including vmware convertor – is this for an old version?

    ROOT\LEGACY_VMWARE-CONVERTER000 : VMware Converter Enterprise Service
    ROOT\LEGACY_VMWARE-CONVERTER-AGENT000 : VMware vCenter Converter Standalone Agent
    ROOT\LEGACY_VMWARE-CONVERTER-SERVER000 : VMware vCenter Converter Standalone Server
    ROOT\LEGACY_VMWARE-CONVERTER-WORKER000 : VMware vCenter Converter Standalone Worker
    ROOT\LEGACY_VMWARE-DR000 : VMware Site Recovery Manager Service

    thanks

  3. jason says:

    I’m sorry, I cannot provide any warranties & I would recommend that you test on some scrap inventory to gain a level of comfort before unleashing on production workloads. I can say this has been used on Windows 2003 Servers in the past with success albeit it was a few years ago.

  4. Ross says:

    thanks for Sharing this. I’ve been wanting to script this portion of the p2v for a long time. Now I don’t have to.

  5. Cachi says:

    Hi,

    This should work in a x64 machine?? I’ve tried it in few x64 machines with no luck… 🙁

  6. Pep says:

    Hi,
    For x64 systems devcon has an specific version, that could be obtained downloading Windows Driver KITS

    https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/hardware/gg454513