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    Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor

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    • magicmarkerM
      magicmarker @JaredBusch
      last edited by

      @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

      @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

      @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

      My long time understanding is no.

      There is no license being upgraded when you are using a new VM like this.

      Now, do you have a piece of hardware with a non OEM license that you can decommission and "move" the license to the hypervisor host? That would make it legal.

      Obviously move is a fake term for paper trail purposes. You do not have to actually P2V anything. Just mark that license as "used" by the Win 10 instance.

      This would be easy to do. I've got available decommissioned Win 7 physical pc's that I can just note the product key is being used for the Veeam Win 10 VM.

      Not OEM license on those

      OEM Win 7 keys on the physical boxes. I'm going to need retail keys instead correct?

      JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @magicmarker
        last edited by

        @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

        @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

        @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

        @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

        My long time understanding is no.

        There is no license being upgraded when you are using a new VM like this.

        Now, do you have a piece of hardware with a non OEM license that you can decommission and "move" the license to the hypervisor host? That would make it legal.

        Obviously move is a fake term for paper trail purposes. You do not have to actually P2V anything. Just mark that license as "used" by the Win 10 instance.

        This would be easy to do. I've got available decommissioned Win 7 physical pc's that I can just note the product key is being used for the Veeam Win 10 VM.

        Not OEM license on those

        OEM Win 7 keys on the physical boxes. I'm going to need retail keys instead correct?

        You cannot "move" OEM licenses. So you can only use your Windows 10 Ent license on those physical boxes. If you are going to use that key.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • magicmarkerM
          magicmarker
          last edited by magicmarker

          Was really planning on installing the Veeam server as a Win 10 VM. Going back to the drawing board now. Looks like I'm either going to have to install the Veeam box on a physical Win 10 pc, or purchase a Windows Server 2016 license so I can run the Veeam server as a VM. Not sure what makes more sense at the moment. Anyone else deploying Veeam servers as physical pc's?

          Edit: A third option may be purchasing a Win 10 retail license and then "move" that license to the VM for paper trail purpose as @JaredBusch mentioned.

          scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @magicmarker
            last edited by

            @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

            What is the typical Veeam backup server OS recommendation for SMB then? Should I be looking at going with a Windows 2016 OS instead?

            Yes.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
              last edited by

              @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

              Edit: It obviously installs and runs jut fine. I'm curious what makes it a "server" that @scottalanmiller thinks disqualifies it from being able to run on Windows 10 Pro/Ent.

              The support workload supplying services to other machines. Running Veeam in a server mode there (not for local consumption.) It's a server service the same as any other unless I'm missing something huge.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                last edited by

                @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                My long time understanding is no.

                There is no license being upgraded when you are using a new VM like this.

                Now, do you have a piece of hardware with a non OEM license that you can decommission and "move" the license to the hypervisor host? That would make it legal.

                Obviously move is a fake term for paper trail purposes. You do not have to actually P2V anything. Just mark that license as "used" by the Win 10 instance.

                This would be easy to do. I've got available decommissioned Win 7 physical pc's that I can just note the product key is being used for the Veeam Win 10 VM.

                Not OEM license on those

                OEM Win 7 keys on the physical boxes. I'm going to need retail keys instead correct?

                You are missing the points. You caught that OEM can't be moved, but other things can, and are missing that even if you can move them, you can't use Windows 10 this way. So you are asking questions that don't make any sense as they don't have any bearing on your resulting options.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                  last edited by

                  @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                  Was really planning on installing the Veeam server as a Win 10 VM. Going back to the drawing board now. Looks like I'm either going to have to install the Veeam box on a physical Win 10 pc...

                  That won't change that Windows 10 cannot be licensed for use as a server. The Veeam process running on there is a server workload. Check your Windows 10 EULA, it'll tell you that that kind of usage is verboten.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                    last edited by

                    @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                    Edit: A third option may be purchasing a Win 10 retail license and then "move" that license to the VM for paper trail purpose as @JaredBusch mentioned.

                    No, that's not an option. That's an option to get Windows 10 virtualized, not an option for using it as a server.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                      last edited by

                      @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                      Not sure what makes more sense at the moment. Anyone else deploying Veeam servers as physical pc's?

                      Only getting Server licensing makes sense, as all of the other options violate the license and you might as well just pirate it, because it's not licensed once you misuse it.

                      No one is doing physical PCs, because it doesn't solve anything. If you are going to pirate it, you might as well pirate it well. If you aren't going to pirate it, then you get VM licensing naturally and there is no issue to solve. It's a bizarre middle ground where you would want to violate the license, but in a way that doesn't result in a good setup. Logically, that just doesn't make sense regardless of the ethical philosophies involved.

                      magicmarkerM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • magicmarkerM
                        magicmarker @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • ObsolesceO
                          Obsolesce
                          last edited by

                          Straight from the license.rtf in Windows 10:

                          222863f4-8847-4b39-b6fb-e709553b73c9-image.png

                          b1ef22a9-e7ef-4616-98a0-f58b0c4b9fcf-image.png

                          pmonchoP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                            last edited by

                            @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                            @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                            Me too, Veeam would really benefit from that. BUT, tons of their features exist by leverage Windows features under the hood to make the magic happen. So unfortunately, Windows Server licensing is just part of the Veeam ecosystem. Veeam is amazing, but this is a key factor as to why we don't just use it across the board. The cost of Veeam plus the often needed cost of Windows can make it pretty formidable for many SMBs.

                            magicmarkerM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • magicmarkerM
                              magicmarker @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                              @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                              @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                              Me too, Veeam would really benefit from that. BUT, tons of their features exist by leverage Windows features under the hood to make the magic happen. So unfortunately, Windows Server licensing is just part of the Veeam ecosystem. Veeam is amazing, but this is a key factor as to why we don't just use it across the board. The cost of Veeam plus the often needed cost of Windows can make it pretty formidable for many SMBs.

                              I've already committed to Veeam, but after I committed, I found Nakivo which runs the backup server on a linux box. Seems like a good competitor to Veeam.

                              scottalanmillerS ObsolesceO C 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @magicmarker
                                last edited by

                                @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                                Me too, Veeam would really benefit from that. BUT, tons of their features exist by leverage Windows features under the hood to make the magic happen. So unfortunately, Windows Server licensing is just part of the Veeam ecosystem. Veeam is amazing, but this is a key factor as to why we don't just use it across the board. The cost of Veeam plus the often needed cost of Windows can make it pretty formidable for many SMBs.

                                I've already committed to Veeam, but after I committed, I found Nakivo which runs the backup server on a linux box. Seems like a good competitor to Veeam.

                                A lot of the same people involved.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • ObsolesceO
                                  Obsolesce @magicmarker
                                  last edited by

                                  @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                  @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                  @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                                  Me too, Veeam would really benefit from that. BUT, tons of their features exist by leverage Windows features under the hood to make the magic happen. So unfortunately, Windows Server licensing is just part of the Veeam ecosystem. Veeam is amazing, but this is a key factor as to why we don't just use it across the board. The cost of Veeam plus the often needed cost of Windows can make it pretty formidable for many SMBs.

                                  I've already committed to Veeam, but after I committed, I found Nakivo which runs the backup server on a linux box. Seems like a good competitor to Veeam.

                                  I set up the Veeam server on a stand alone server running Windows Server 2016 w/SA, backup repository elsewhere. On-prem backups (in backup repo) get thrown on to tape on a schedule, and have a few tape sets that rotate off-site.

                                  wrx7mW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • wrx7mW
                                    wrx7m @Obsolesce
                                    last edited by

                                    @Obsolesce said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                    @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                    @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                    @scottalanmiller Really wish Veeam would do a linux appliance for the backup server. Veeam allows the backup software to install on a Win 10 OS. I get it though, I need to install it on a Server 2016 VM. Thanks for you input.

                                    Me too, Veeam would really benefit from that. BUT, tons of their features exist by leverage Windows features under the hood to make the magic happen. So unfortunately, Windows Server licensing is just part of the Veeam ecosystem. Veeam is amazing, but this is a key factor as to why we don't just use it across the board. The cost of Veeam plus the often needed cost of Windows can make it pretty formidable for many SMBs.

                                    I've already committed to Veeam, but after I committed, I found Nakivo which runs the backup server on a linux box. Seems like a good competitor to Veeam.

                                    I set up the Veeam server on a stand alone server running Windows Server 2016 w/SA, backup repository elsewhere. On-prem backups (in backup repo) get thrown on to tape on a schedule, and have a few tape sets that rotate off-site.

                                    I have it on a 2012 R2 VM with the backup repo on a Synology DS3617+

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • C
                                      Coreytay @magicmarker
                                      last edited by

                                      @magicmarker
                                      We use the Nakivo appliance it works well.

                                      magicmarkerM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • magicmarkerM
                                        magicmarker @Coreytay
                                        last edited by

                                        @Coreytay I wish I would have known about them sooner. I played around with the trial license and was impressed.

                                        FATeknollogeeF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • FATeknollogeeF
                                          FATeknollogee @magicmarker
                                          last edited by

                                          @magicmarker said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                          @Coreytay I wish I would have known about them sooner. I played around with the trial license and was impressed.

                                          Not sure what type of vm's you're looking to backup...Have you looked at Altaro VM Backup?

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DustinB3403D
                                            DustinB3403 @JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            @JaredBusch said in Correct license for a Win 10 Veeam backup server on Type-1 Hypervisor:

                                            My long time understanding is no.

                                            There is no license being upgraded when you are using a new VM like this.

                                            Now, do you have a piece of hardware with a non OEM license that you can decommission and "move" the license to the hypervisor host? That would make it legal.

                                            Obviously move is a fake term for paper trail purposes. You do not have to actually P2V anything. Just mark that license as "used" by the Win 10 instance.

                                            Technically you can't move the license like this. . . so no that isn't legal.

                                            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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