SAP Migration lift&shift

Vincenzo Montano 0 Reputation points
2023-10-12T08:29:34.57+00:00

Hi,

please, I have SAP systems installed on servers with Windows Server 2012, which will soon end support, we are thinking of migrating the systems to machines where Windows Server 2019 will be installed, is it possible to do a "lift&shift" migration? that is, bring all the data with related filesystems to the new machines with Windows Server 2019? I have already verified that my version of SAP is compatible with Windows Server 2019.

Thank you very much to those who reply

Windows Server 2019
Windows Server 2019
A Microsoft server operating system that supports enterprise-level management updated to data storage.
3,797 questions
SAP HANA on Azure Large Instances
SAP HANA on Azure Large Instances
Microsoft branding terminology for an Azure offer to run HANA instances on SAP HANA hardware deployed in Large Instance stamps in different Azure regions.
123 questions
Windows Server 2012
Windows Server 2012
A Microsoft server operating system that supports enterprise-level management, data storage, applications, and communications.
1,599 questions
0 comments No comments
{count} votes

1 answer

Sort by: Most helpful
  1. Tushar Kumar 3,331 Reputation points MVP
    2023-10-12T09:35:55.2566667+00:00

    Hi Vincenzo Montano,

    Thank you for your qustion on Microsoft QNA.

    Support for Server 2012 is already ended 2 days back!

    The easiest and quickest option for you will be to On-board the Server to Azure ARC and get ESUs until 2026 OCT . Check the below link for details:

    https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/lifecycle/announcements/windows-server-2012-r2-end-of-support

    Coming back to the migration :

    You have 2 options

    • Go for an inplace upgrade of your Windows server On-premises and Migrate.
      • Migrate server on Azure perform inplace upgrade on Azure and once stisfied swith to Azure Server (recommended)
            -  This option will provide you testing opportunity before you go for production 
        
                  -  also you don't need to worry much about breaking exsisiting system or capacity available on-prem. 
        

    https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/windows-in-place-upgrade

    Please click "Accept as Answer" if this helps.

    0 comments No comments

Your answer

Answers can be marked as Accepted Answers by the question author, which helps users to know the answer solved the author's problem.