After the upgrade finishes, your server will restart.Īfter your upgrade completes, you must make sure the upgrade to Windows Server 2012 R2 was successful. The in-place upgrade starts, showing you the Upgrading Windows screen with its progress. It was put in place to prompt for clean installations, but it isn't necessary. If you see a page that tells you upgrade isn't recommended, you can ignore it and select Confirm. Setup reminds you to make sure your apps are compatible with Windows Server 2012 R2, using the information in the Windows Server installation and upgrade article, and then select Next.
Select Upgrade: Install Windows and keep files, settings, and applications to choose to do an in-place upgrade.
Select I accept the license terms to accept the terms of your licensing agreement, based on your distribution channel (such as, Retail, Volume License, OEM, ODM, and so on), and then select Next. Select the Windows Server 2012 R2 edition you want to install, and then select Next. On the Windows Server 2012 R2 screen, select Install now.įor internet-connected devices, select Go online to install updates now (recommended). Locate the Windows Server 2012 R2 Setup media, and then select setup.exe. Make sure the BuildLabEx value says you're running Windows Server 2008 R2. You can't have any virtual machines running during the in-place upgrade. You must also Shut down, Quick migrate, or Live migrate any virtual machines currently running on the server.
Open the Registry Editor, go to the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\WindowsNT\CurrentVersion hive, and then copy and paste the Windows Server BuildLabEx (version) and EditionID (edition) into the same location as above.Īfter you've collected all of your Windows Server-related information, we highly recommend that you backup your operating system, apps, and virtual machines. Type ipconfig /all into the command prompt, and then copy and paste the resulting configuration information into the same location as above.
Open a command prompt, go to c:\Windows\system32, and then type systeminfo.exe.Ĭopy, paste, and store the resulting system information somewhere off of your device. Because this information is intended for use only if your upgrade fails, you must make sure that you store the information somewhere that you can get to it off of your device. Before you begin your in-place upgradeīefore you start your Windows Server upgrade, we recommend that you collect some information from your devices, for diagnostic and troubleshooting purposes. To upgrade to Windows Server 2019, use this topic first to upgrade to Windows Server 2012 R2, and then upgrade from Windows Server 2012 R2 to Windows Server 2019. This article helps you to move from Windows Server 2008 R2 to Windows Server 2012 R2. An in-place upgrade allows you to go from an older operating system to a newer one, while keeping your settings, server roles, and data intact. If you want to keep the same hardware and all the server roles you've already set up without flattening the server, you'll want to do an in-place upgrade.