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July 1, 2025Introduction
In the ever-evolving world of cloud computing, maximizing performance and efficiency is crucial for businesses leveraging virtual machines (VMs) on platforms like Microsoft Azure, especially for high I/O workloads like SAP on Azure or database applications. One significant upgrade that can yield substantial performance improvements is converting your Azure VM from a SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) disk setup to NVMe (Non-Volatile Memory Express) using Azure Boost. This blog post will guide you through the process of making this conversion and explore the numerous advantages of NVMe over SCSI.
In previous posts you had to prepare the OS yourself and it was a complex process for Linux and Windows.
Now you can move to NVMe with just one simple easy command and the script will take care about everything including the preparation of your operating system.
Advantages of Azure Boost
Azure Boost is a powerful enhancement tool for Azure VMs, offering the following advantages:
- Accelerated Disk Performance: Azure Boost optimizes disk I/O operations, significantly increasing the speed and efficiency of your VM’s storage.
- Seamless Integration: Easily integrates with existing Azure infrastructure, allowing for a smooth transition and immediate performance benefits.
- Cost-Effective Optimization: By enhancing the performance of existing VMs, Azure Boost helps reduce the need for more expensive hardware upgrades or additional resources.
What is changing for your VM?
Changing the host interface from SCSI to NVMe will not change the remote storage (OS disk or data disks), but change the way the operating systems sees the disks. The way the devices are shown depends on the varios VM size with v6 SKUs now also having up to 4 temporary disks using NVMe.
SCSI enabled VM | NVMe enabled VM (v5 and Mv3) | NVMe enabled v6 | |
OS disk | /dev/sda | /dev/nvme0n1 | /dev/nvme0n1 |
Temp Disk | /dev/sdb | /dev/sda | /dev/nvme1n1 |
First Data Disk | /dev/sdc | /dev/nvme0n2 | /dev/nvme0n2 |
In the following sections, we’ll provide a step-by-step guide to converting your Azure VM from SCSI to NVMe using Azure Boost, ensuring you can take full advantage of these performance improvements and maintain a competitive edge in the cloud computing landscape.
Preparing your virtual machine (VM) from SCSI to NVMe
To migrate from SCSI to NVMe and benefit from higher performance some prerequisites need to be in place:
- Your Azure VM Generation needs to be V2, you can check it using e.g. the portal on your VM
Check VM generation on Azure Portal
- Windows
- On Windows 3rdparty software like Antivirus can influence the behavior after the migration, if you see a bluescreen please convert back to SCSI and try disabling your Antivirus/Security solution
- When you run e.g. a v6 VM you can get up to 4 tempdisks, all of them will be RAW and not preformated with NTFS
- Linux
- Previously you were able to identify the Data Disks using LUN IDs in /dev/disk/azure/scsi1/lunX, as we migrate to NVMe those udev rules are not valid anymore. You can install the azure-vm-utils package or manually deploy a udev rule available on GitHub
- When you run e.g. a v6 VM you can get up to 4 tempdisks, all of them will be RAW, you can use e.g. cloud-init to run initializtion of those disks everytime the operating system starts
Conversion from VMs with tempdisk (e.g. Standard_D4ds_v5) to Intel or AMD v6 SKUs (e.g. Standard_D4ds_v6) is currently not supported. The only possible migration is through disk snapshots.
You can convert VMs without tempdisk (e.g. Standard_D4s_v5) to v6 SKUs.
Prepare your environment (required for local PowerShell)
When running local PowerShell you need to make sure to have all the requirements installed and configured
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted
Install PowerShell modules for Azure
Install-Module Az -Force
Download the script:
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri “https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/SAP-on-Azure-Scripts-and-Utilities/refs/heads/main/Azure-NVMe-Utils/Azure-NVMe-Conversion.ps1” -OutFile “Azure-NVMe-Conversion.ps1”
Logon to Azure and select the correct subscription
Connect-AzAccount
Select-azsubscription -Subscription [Your-Subscription-Id]
Migrate your VM
You can always revert the migration back to SCSI
To migrate your VM you need to know some parameters
- ResourceGroupName of the VM you want to convert
- VMName of the VM you want to convert
- NewControllerType will be SCSI or NVMe
- VMSize is the new VM SKU, can also be the same SKU if it supports both Controller Types
Optional Parameters:
- StartVM automatically starts withe VM after the migration
- WriteLogFile stores the output in a local file
- IgnoreSKUCheck does not check if the required VM Size is available in the region/zone
- FixOperatingSystemSettings automatically prepares your Windows or Linux system using Azure RunCommands
- IgnoreOSCheck does not run the OS check, the VM can be shutdown, you need to make sure your VM is prepared
Sample Command and Output
PS /home/philipp> ./NVMe-Conversion.ps1 -ResourceGroupName testrg -VMName testvm -NewControllerType NVMe -VMSize Standard_E4bds_v5 -StartVM -FixOperatingSystemSettings
00:00 – INFO – Starting script Azure-NVMe-Conversion.ps1
00:00 – INFO – Script started at 06/27/2025 15:41:39
00:00 – INFO – Script version: 2025062704
00:00 – INFO – Script parameters:
00:00 – INFO – ResourceGroupName -> testrg
00:00 – INFO – VMName -> testvm
00:00 – INFO – NewControllerType -> NVMe
00:00 – INFO – VMSize -> Standard_E4bds_v5
00:00 – INFO – StartVM -> True
00:00 – INFO – FixOperatingSystemSettings -> True
00:00 – INFO – Script Version 2025062704
00:00 – INFO – Module Az.Compute is installed and the version is correct.
00:00 – INFO – Module Az.Accounts is installed and the version is correct.
00:00 – INFO – Module Az.Resources is installed and the version is correct.
00:00 – INFO – Connected to Azure subscription name: AG-GE-CE-PHLEITEN
00:00 – INFO – Connected to Azure subscription ID: 232b6759-xxxx-yyyy-zzzz-757472230e6c
00:00 – INFO – VM testvm found in Resource Group testrg
00:01 – INFO – VM testvm is running
00:01 – INFO – VM testvm is running Linux
00:01 – INFO – VM testvm is running SCSI
00:02 – INFO – Running in Azure Cloud Shell
00:02 – INFO – Authentication token is a SecureString
00:02 – INFO – Authentication token received
00:02 – INFO – Getting available SKU resources
00:02 – INFO – This might take a while …
00:06 – INFO – VM SKU Standard_E4bds_v5 is available in zone 1
00:06 – INFO – Resource disk support matches between original VM size and new VM size.
00:06 – INFO – Found VM SKU – Checking for Capabilities
00:06 – INFO – VM SKU has supported capabilities
00:06 – INFO – VM supports NVMe
00:06 – INFO – Pre-Checks completed
00:06 – INFO – Entering Linux OS section
00:37 – INFO – Script output: Enable succeeded:
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [stdout]
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] Operating system detected: sles
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] Checking if NVMe driver is included in initrd/initramfs…
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] NVMe driver found in initrd/initramfs.
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] Checking nvme_core.io_timeout parameter…
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] nvme_core.io_timeout is set to 240.
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] Checking /etc/fstab for deprecated device names…
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [INFO] /etc/fstab does not contain deprecated device names.
00:37 – INFO – Script output:
00:37 – INFO – Script output: [stderr]
00:37 – INFO – Script output:
00:37 – INFO – Errors: 0 – Warnings: 0 – Info: 7
00:37 – INFO – Shutting down VM testvm
01:18 – INFO – VM testvm stopped
01:18 – INFO – Checking if VM is stopped and deallocated
01:19 – INFO – Setting OS Disk capabilities for testvm_OsDisk_1_165411276cbe459097929b981eb9b3e2 to new Disk Controller Type to NVMe
01:19 – INFO – generated URL for OS disk update:
01:19 – INFO – https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/232b6759-xxxx-yyyy-zzzz-757472230e6c/resourceGroups/testrg/providers/Microsoft.Compute/disks/testvm_OsDisk_1_165411276cbe459097929b981eb9b3e2?api-version=2023-04-02
01:19 – INFO – OS Disk updated
01:19 – INFO – Setting new VM Size from Standard_E4s_v3 to Standard_E4bds_v5 and Controller to NVMe
01:19 – INFO – Updating VM testvm
01:54 – INFO – VM testvm updated
01:54 – INFO – Start after update enabled for VM testvm
01:54 – INFO – Waiting for 15 seconds before starting the VM
02:09 – INFO – Starting VM testvm
03:31 – INFO – VM testvm started
03:31 – INFO – As the virtual machine got started using the script you can check the operating system now
03:31 – INFO – If you have any issues after the conversion you can revert the changes by running the script with the old settings
03:31 – IMPORTANT – Here is the command to revert the changes:
03:31 – INFO – .Azure-NVMe-Conversion.ps1 -ResourceGroupName testrg -VMName testvm -NewControllerType SCSI -VMSize Standard_E4s_v3 -StartVM
03:31 – INFO – Script ended at 06/27/2025 15:45:11
03:31 – INFO – Exiting
PS /home/philipp>
Reverting back
The output shows a PowerShell command that will revert back your VM to SCSI at the end of the script:
.Azure-NVMe-Conversion.ps1 -ResourceGroupName testvg -VMName testvm -NewControllerType SCSI -VMSize Standard_E4s_v3 -StartVM
Manually preparing Windows
To manually prepare Windows you just need to run one command. It will set the NVMe driver back to early start.
Everytime you boot Windows will evaluate the required drivers. If you set NVMe driver to the correct state, reboot and then check again, it will be started later during boot.
sc.exe config stornvme start=boot
Manually preparing Linux
To manually prepare Linux you need to make sure that
- NVMe drivers are part of initrd/initramfs
- have the NVMe I/O timeout set to 240 seconds (nvme_core.io_timeout=240) in grub
- check /etc/fstab for any references to device names (e.g. /dev/sda) or old udev rule entries (e.g. /dev/disk/azure/scsi1/lun0)
Please refer to your Linux providers documentation how to adjust the required settings.