Executive Summary
Nutanix AHV is not a fallback platform — it is the primary infrastructure for a growing share of the enterprise and federal edge. But Nutanix shops face a modernization question of their own: as workloads evolve toward Kubernetes-native architectures, which VMs are ready to containerize, which should stay on HCI, and what does the migration path actually cost?
Prism Central's collector export captures a complete point-in-time snapshot of your AHV estate — clusters, storage containers, protection domains, licensing, and per-VM configuration. Like any raw inventory export, it tells no story on its own. Velantix Axiom ingests the Nutanix Collector format natively and converts it into a defensible transformation blueprint.
The core distinction: "Prism Central gives you the facts. Velantix Axiom gives you the findings. There is a profound difference between infrastructure data and infrastructure intelligence — and that holds whether your estate runs VMware, Nutanix, or both."
What Velantix Axiom Does With Your Nutanix Collector Data
- Ingests the full Nutanix Collector export — vmList, vInfo, Storage Containers, vCluster, vLicense, volumeGroups, and more
- Runs five Nutanix-specific deterministic risk checks that RVTools-based tools have no equivalent for
- Builds cluster capacity, storage container, and protection-domain summaries alongside per-VM classification
- Models 3-5 year TCO under continued Nutanix AHV, OpenShift/KubeVirt, and hybrid destinations
- Recommends the correct migration toolchain per estate — CMC for AHV-to-OpenShift, not a VMware-only tool retrofitted to a job it was not built for
- Generates executive-ready reports in PDF and Excel — in days, not months
Why CMC, Not MTV, for AHV-to-OpenShift
Red Hat's Migration Toolkit for Virtualization is a strong tool — for its supported sources. MTV's native source support is VMware vSphere, Red Hat Virtualization, and OpenStack. It has no native Nutanix AHV source connector, because it depends on hypervisor-level APIs that Prism Central does not expose in the shape MTV expects.
Cirrus Migrate Cloud (CMC) is architected differently: a guest-level agent that operates inside the VM itself, bypassing the hypervisor and Prism Central entirely. That makes it source-agnostic by design — it works the same way whether the VM sits on AHV, ESXi, or bare metal. For AHV estates, that is the difference between a toolchain that has to be forced to fit and one built for the job.
What this means in practice: Block-level continuous replication with intelligent QoS throttling (iQoS), and MigrateOps™ YAML recipes for automating wave orchestration — without requiring Prism Central API integration work that does not exist for this source/target combination.
Axiom's Migration Toolchain recommendation adapts automatically based on your estate's ground-truth source platform — detected from the ingested data itself, not just the intake declaration — so a Nutanix-source estate gets a CMC-based plan and a VMware-source estate gets the OpenShift-native tooling that fits it.
Cluster, Storage Container & Protection Domain Analysis
Beyond per-VM classification, Axiom's Nutanix workbook output includes dedicated tabs summarizing cluster capacity headroom, storage container utilization by container and cluster, and protection domain coverage — surfacing which VMs have no DR protection configured at all, a question that matters as much for a "stay on AHV" decision as it does for a migration decision.
Get the Full Guide
This excerpt covers the framework — the complete guide includes the full risk-check remediation playbook, cluster and storage container capacity modeling, protection domain coverage analysis, and toolchain selection logic for mixed VMware + Nutanix estates.
"The organizations that modernize fastest are not the ones with the most data — they are the ones with the clearest intelligence about what that data means. That is true whether the export comes from RVTools or Prism Central."
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