ZStack Cloud Platform
Single Server Deployment with Full Features, Free for One Year
The discontinuation of VMware VVF and VVEP has forced customers to adopt the more integrated—and significantly more expensive—VMware VCF subscription bundle. As a result, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are now facing cost increases several times higher than before. This has made migrating away from VMware to alternative platforms not just an option, but an urgent necessity that SMEs must address as quickly as possible.
More small and medium businesses in North America now look for VMware alternatives. The new subscription prices keep going up. Licensing rules often change after VMware was acquired by Broadcom. Many IT managers search daily for VMware Broadcom alternatives. They want something cheaper and easier to run. VMware vSphere is still common, but companies want platforms with clear costs and better support for containers or cloud work.
SMBs can finish the switch from VMware in six months if you plan well. Most SMBs keep the business running while they move servers. A good step-by-step plan makes it possible. You need to check what you have, test small parts first, and use the right VMware migration tools.
VMware now sells everything by subscription. Many older customers pay much more than before. The bundles are bigger and costlier. IT teams do not like surprises on the bill. They look for VMs alternatives, VMware alternatives, and other virtualization alternatives.
A full VMware stack includes vSphere, vSAN, NSX, and Tanzu. With VVF and VVEP now discontinued and VCF becoming the only remaining option, making it harder for SMBs to migrate VMware environments without cost increases. For smaller companies, this gets heavy fast. Many now explore VMware Tanzu migration paths, broader VMware Migrate options, or ways to convert VMs into containers. A modern platform designed for smooth VMware Migrate workflows can make the transition simpler and more cost-effective.
Write down every VM you have. Count the operating systems, databases, and programs. Note storage links, network cards, and backup rules. This list is the base for the whole move.
New platforms use different virtual hardware. Check old snapshots, VMXNET drivers, and VMware Tools. Some settings do not move directly. Fix them early so the VMs start without trouble on the new system.
Make fresh full backups before you touch anything. Keep copies outside the old system. Have a quick way to go back if something breaks. Good backups save the day during migration.
Look at everything you use today. Find HA clusters, vSAN rules, NSX networks, or Tanzu setups that may affect how you migrate VMware workloads. Decide which VMs stay VMs and which ones you want to turn into containers as part of evaluating virtualization alternatives. Select the platform that best supports your VMware Migrate goals. Make a test list with the least important servers first.
Take five or ten test VMs and move them. Use OVF/OVA files or direct import. Start them on the new platform. Check if they boot, if the network works, and if programs run at normal speed. Try both live migration and cold migration. Live migration has almost no downtime when everything matches. Cold migration is safer when the systems are very different.
Move real servers in small groups. Pick quiet hours or weekends. After each group, test the databases and programs carefully. Check speed and network settings again. This is the time to do VMware TKGS migration or move Tanzu workloads to a new Kubernetes if you planned that.
When everything runs on the new platform, fine-tune the settings. Adjust CPU pins, storage speed limits, and network cards. Set up new monitoring and train the team. Turn off the old VMware licenses step by step.
KVM is free and runs on almost any Linux. Many companies build their own stack or buy simple managed versions. Costs stay low, and you avoid vendor lock-in.
If your company already uses Windows Server and Active Directory, Hyper-V feels natural. Licensing is often cheaper for smaller teams.
AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud can take your VMs with almost no hardware work. Good choice if you plan to use more cloud services later.
Some businesses like all-in-one boxes that include compute, storage, and network. They are easy to grow and manage.
ZStack ZSphere is a clean KVM platform built to simplify VMware migration and offer SMBs a reliable option among today’s VMs alternatives. It reads OVF/OVA files directly, maps disks and networks automatically, and schedules resources fairly. For IT teams reviewing different virtualization alternatives, ZStack ZSphere helps them complete VMware Migrate projects in months instead of years because the platform is lightweight and follows open standards.
Live migration works great when CPUs and storage match. Cold migration is safer when you change to a different hypervisor. Most teams that migrate VMware workloads to KVM or other virtualization alternatives use cold migration to avoid surprises and keep the process predictable.
VLAN numbers, firewall rules, and storage paths must match exactly. Make a clear table before you start. Test every rule after the move.
Remove VMware Tools and install new drivers. Old Linux VMs sometimes need a new bootloader. Test every important program in the pilot phase.
Write new run-books and train the team. Update backup jobs and monitoring dashboards. A short checklist for daily checks keeps everything stable after the switch.
ZStack gives you a complete cloud platform that is easy to use and grows with your business. The ZSphere virtualization part works together with storage, networking, and management tools. You can import VMs fast, run containers later, and keep everything under one roof.
More than 4,000 companies across over 30 countries and regions are already using ZStack, including more than 1,000 enterprise customers that have adopted ZStack solutions as a replacement for VMware. The ZStack ZSphere virtualization platform has been recognized as a Representative Vendor in Gartner’s Market Guide for Server Virtualization Platforms.
A: Many teams pick KVM platforms, Hyper-V, managed HCI, OpenShift Virtualization, or cloud VMs. All give clearer costs than the new VMware subscriptions.
A: Use live migration when hardware and drivers match. Choose cold migration when you switch to a different hypervisor. Cold is slower but much safer.
A: Most people export with OVF/OVA, then import on the new system. Some tools convert disks or help move VMware Tanzu workloads.
A: Simple clusters move in weeks. Full container refactoring can take three to six months with testing steps.
A: Yes. Good planning, small test groups, and the right tools make six months enough for most small and medium companies.