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Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V Cookbook

You're reading from   Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V Cookbook To master the administration of Windows Server Hyper-V, this is the book you need. With over 50 useful recipes, plus handy tips and tricks, it helps you handle virtualization using best practice principles.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849684422
Length 304 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Leandro Eduardo S Carvalho Leandro Eduardo S Carvalho
Author Profile Icon Leandro Eduardo S Carvalho
Leandro Eduardo S Carvalho
Leandro Carvalho Leandro Carvalho
Author Profile Icon Leandro Carvalho
Leandro Carvalho
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Installing and Managing Hyper-V in Full or Server Core Mode 2. Migrating and Upgrading Physical and Virtual Servers FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Disk and Network Settings 4. Saving Time and Cost with Hyper-V Automation 5. Hyper-V Best Practices, Tips, and Tricks 6. Security and Delegation of Control 7. Configuring High Availability in Hyper-V 8. Disaster Recovery for Hyper-V 9. Monitoring, Tuning, and Troubleshooting Hyper-V Hyper-V Architecture and Components Index

Enabling the Hyper-V role


By default, Windows Server does not come with Hyper-V installed. In order to start using the virtual environment, Hyper-V needs to be enabled. Even with its straightforward steps, it is important to understand how it works after the setup and what has changed in Windows architecture.

Getting ready

There are different methods to install Hyper-V. The most common one is through the graphical interface.

To get ready to enable Hyper-V you must be logged on with administrative privileges.

How to do it...

The following steps will demonstrate how to enable the Hyper-V Role for Windows Server and what is changed in the Windows architecture after its installation.

  1. On the Start Screen select Server Manager.

  2. In the Server Manager Dashboard, click on Add roles and features.

  3. In the Add Roles and Feature Wizard, click on Next three times.

  4. On the next screen, Server Roles page, select Hyper-V, as shown in the next screenshot, and click on Next three times.

  5. In the Virtual Switches window, select the network adapter you want to use on Hyper-V. You can add, remove, and modify the virtual switches after the Hyper-V installation through Hyper-V Manager.

  6. On the Virtual Machine Migration page, check the Allow this server to send and receive live migration of virtual machines option if you want to enable live migration requests, then click on Next.

  7. In the last Hyper-V installation page called Default Stores, specify the default location for virtual disks and virtual machine configuration files, click on Next and then Install to start the installation process.

  8. Reboot the server after the installation.

How it works...

The process that you have performed to install Hyper-V is quite simple, but it changes the processor architecture by creating a new privileged layer called ring -1 that runs under the normal layers. The setup process, completed in the previous task, installs the Microsoft Hypervisor on this layer to make sure that Hyper-V has more privilege than Windows itself. Basically, the host operating system runs above the Hypervisor together and at the same level as the virtual machines. The host turns into a special virtual machine containing the virtualization stack, responsible to manage all the virtual machines from it. The following diagram illustrates Hyper-V being installed in the ring -1 and all the partitions running under it.

After the first reboot, the Windows boot (winload.exe) loads the driver (hvboot.sys) responsible to verify the processor that is running and if it supports virtualization. Then the Hypervisor image file is loaded. The host OS and the virtual machines are called partitions. Because they run at the same privileged access above the Hypervisor, the host OS is known as parent partition and the virtual machines are known as child partitions.

There's more...

For automation and fast installation, you can also enable Hyper-V using command lines. You can do that by using the command line ocsetup, Servermanagercmd, or Windows PowerShell.

Installing Hyper-V using Windows PowerShell

For a PowerShell installation, open Windows PowerShell and run the following command:

Add-WindowsFeature Hyper-V

See also

  • The Creating and managing virtual switches recipe in Chapter 3, Managing Disk and Network Settings

  • The Hyper-V architecture components recipe in Appendix A

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