I don't think there's a utility as such, but you can load vmdk files in VirtualBox, so you can create a guest with your vmdk as one disk, a vdi as another, then boot up a Linux CD and use dd to copy from one to the other.
I don't know if VirtualBox now has support for vmdk snapshots. If so, you can use the vmdk file as is, without converting to vdi, and sacrifice no functionality.
There's a tutorial on using qemu tools and vditool to do that here.
I don't think there's a utility as such, but you can load
vmdk
files in VirtualBox, so you can create a guest with yourvmdk
as one disk, avdi
as another, then boot up a Linux CD and usedd
to copy from one to the other.I don't know if VirtualBox now has support for
vmdk
snapshots. If so, you can use thevmdk
file as is, without converting tovdi
, and sacrifice no functionality.In your VMWare virtual machine, install Acronis and do a backup. You will get an image file.
Run VirtualBox with the Acronis Recovery iso. Restore from previously created image.
Acronis isn't free though.