Export to OVF 2.0 Appliance Expired All Windows Evaluations
Posted: 7. Sep 2016, 22:26
Greetings,
I setup a few VM's running Windows Server 2012 R2 and one running a Windows 10 LTSB, and all using the Microsoft evaluation installers. After getting them configured I exported them as a virtual appliance using OVF 2.0 from VirtualBox. Unfortunately when you import this appliance into another VirtualBox all the licensing for the evaluation has expired. I did this a few more times to confirm and had a few friends also import it on their systems with the same output every time. Also this environment was setup as an AirGap on a internal network only those VMs can talk over, and when importing the VM I did NOT choose the change MAC addresses as I wanted to avoid anything triggering Windows deactivating itself.
The rub though is if I copy the VM folders over to another system and just use them, everything is okay and the evaluations are not expired.
I am not sure what the export to OVF 2.0 is doing that is causing this and if there is a way to prevent this from happening. As the appliance format is a great compact way to distribute full multiple VM environments, however if for it to be useful for me I need it to be able to maintain the state of the Windows evaluation period. I am not trying to trick the evaluation, I still want it to tick down day by day for the full period before it stops. These are demo environments to show of various features or functionality that are throw away after a few months, and the evaluation time period is more than enough for my needs.
Any help on understanding what is happening when VMs are exported to the OVF 2.0 format is appreciated, especially if anyone can help fix the issue so that the export and import process maintains the evaluation period.
My host if it maters is Windows 10 Pro in all situations where I created the environment and imported the OVF 2.0 file.
I setup a few VM's running Windows Server 2012 R2 and one running a Windows 10 LTSB, and all using the Microsoft evaluation installers. After getting them configured I exported them as a virtual appliance using OVF 2.0 from VirtualBox. Unfortunately when you import this appliance into another VirtualBox all the licensing for the evaluation has expired. I did this a few more times to confirm and had a few friends also import it on their systems with the same output every time. Also this environment was setup as an AirGap on a internal network only those VMs can talk over, and when importing the VM I did NOT choose the change MAC addresses as I wanted to avoid anything triggering Windows deactivating itself.
The rub though is if I copy the VM folders over to another system and just use them, everything is okay and the evaluations are not expired.
I am not sure what the export to OVF 2.0 is doing that is causing this and if there is a way to prevent this from happening. As the appliance format is a great compact way to distribute full multiple VM environments, however if for it to be useful for me I need it to be able to maintain the state of the Windows evaluation period. I am not trying to trick the evaluation, I still want it to tick down day by day for the full period before it stops. These are demo environments to show of various features or functionality that are throw away after a few months, and the evaluation time period is more than enough for my needs.
Any help on understanding what is happening when VMs are exported to the OVF 2.0 format is appreciated, especially if anyone can help fix the issue so that the export and import process maintains the evaluation period.
My host if it maters is Windows 10 Pro in all situations where I created the environment and imported the OVF 2.0 file.