These are by far the best tutorials on the web; excellent explanations that assume little or no previous experience on the part of the learner. Thanks Will.
thank you so much you open my eyes about virtual machine before i only used VM for testing and practicing with servers but not when i wanted to work in France i see one server installed VM i was shocked but your videos give me confidence and now i will take it easy and peace of a cake.
Crystal clear explanations. However, sometimes my attention span is stretched to it's limits with your prestatements like "however", "as stated before", "as I mentioned earlier" combined with your very slow rate speech. In other words, I watch your videos with 1.5x speed. To put this in perspective, thanks for the good stuff!
Hello! Please I have a client Hyper-V manager I installed on my computer that runs windows 8.1 Pro which I used for labs. I created a private network for communication between my VMs on my client Hyper-V. I created another VM which I intend to use for an external communication. When I decided to create an external network from the virtual switch manager I got an error message as thus, "Error applying virtual switch properties". Please help.
You said (15:34) that you can add upto 12 virtual network adapters to a virtual machine , is there a limitation to the number of Virtual Machines connected to a Virtual adapter ? I understand that it would share the bandwidth and make it slow but what is the recommended number if any ? BTW your posting is truly fantabulous , appreciate for all you have provided to the IT community - good work !!!
Arun Vijay Hi Arun. Thanks for commenting. That's an excellent question. I am not aware of any limits set by Hyper-V on the number of Virtual Machines that can be connected to the same Virtual Switch. Not even Microsoft have acknowledged this in the "Hyper-V Scalability" TechNet Article here: technet.microsoft.com/en-GB/library/jj680093.aspx As such, I believe the "upper limit" is likely to be determined by your hardware and bandwidth - so you may want to use a 1Gbps network adapter, if possible. Personally, I am a fan of assigning every Virtual Machine its own dedicated Virtual Switch, assuming you have the hardware to do so. That way, every Virtual Machine has exclusive use of one physical network adapter (just like it would if it were a physical machine). Glad you enjoyed the video - thanks for watching :-)
Hi Peter The short answer is: Yes. You can assign static public and private IP addresses to Virtual Machines, if you really wanted too. Of course, the WAN IP address can only be used if you own it. If you do not own it, it simply won't work. But the question is why? Public WAN IP addresses are usually assigned to routers. You would normally assign a private LAN IP address to your Virtual Machines and have them sit behind a firewall and router, like any regular computer. Unless you have a very good reason to do this, I'd strongly discourage it. Hope this helps.
These are by far the best tutorials on the web; excellent explanations that assume little or no previous experience on the part of the learner. Thanks Will.
As stated from others - straight forward, clear descriptions. Some of the best I have listened to. Thank you for putting them out there!
Very helpful lessons to understand the HYPER-V in a simple way. Explained very well along with the DEMO. Many thanks
thank you so much you open my eyes about virtual machine before i only used VM for testing and practicing with servers but not when i wanted to work in France i see one server installed VM i was shocked but your videos give me confidence and now i will take it easy and peace of a cake.
Thanks. It is still a good tutorial up to this day. Please upload some more.
Best explanation ever on Hyper-V and I enjoyed the British accent. Well done and thank you for the free training videos.
Complete, clear and to the point, an excellent video
+Jorge Gonzalez Many thanks. Glad you enjoyed the video. Thank you for leaving your feedback.
I dont know how you can dislike this video. Thank you very much for your efforts
Those videos are awesome. Very concise and clear!
very clearly explained and easy to understan. Thank you very much from Suriname
Another classic video. Your videos are inspiring. Many Thanks.
+Joe Darvish Thank you very much Joe. So pleased to hear you enjoyed the video. Thanks for taking the time to comment.
Crystal clear explanations. However, sometimes my attention span is stretched to it's limits with your prestatements like "however", "as stated before", "as I mentioned earlier" combined with your very slow rate speech. In other words, I watch your videos with 1.5x speed. To put this in perspective, thanks for the good stuff!
such a wonderful tutorial
Thank you for the great series!
Thanks. Your videos are very educational and easy to understand.
Everything is will explained,making it easy for me to explain to top management advantage and disadvantage of Using Virtual Server.
Its simply awesome explanation , kudos to you !
+Nataraj Dasappa Thank you for the great feedback. Glad you enjoyed the video.
It's very easy to understand.. Thank you very much sir...
Excellent presentation. Thanks for your time and efforts.
+Jeric Ns You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed the video! Thanks for watching.
what a lovely video. Cleared all my confusion!
This is very professional !!!! very crystal clear
Glad I found you!
very helpful!! many thanks from Singapore :)
Cheers!
perfect video to learn
Another helpful video. Thank you.
You're very welcome, Brian. Glad you found the video useful. Thanks for watching and commenting
Wow awsome tutorial,,, very clear
u r so precise and clear .... subscribed !
+jabbin fathima Thank you. Great to have you on board :-)
thnx for the reply ..... love from india
{kerala]
Are you a sys admin ?
Fantastic video, Many thanks....
+gsn murthy Thank you gsn murthy. Glad you found the video useful. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Hello! Please I have a client Hyper-V manager I installed on my computer that runs windows 8.1 Pro which I used for labs. I created a private network for communication between my VMs on my client Hyper-V. I created another VM which I intend to use for an external communication. When I decided to create an external network from the virtual switch manager I got an error message as thus, "Error applying virtual switch properties".
Please help.
can you please do more advance videos this stuff is awesome your the best man
nice vidoe and well demostrated
+Mahtab Alam Thank you very much. Glad you enjoyed the video.
Well explained videos . Thank you a lot.
Thank you so much
Do we know if the instructions in these tutorials are still valid?
Thanks Bro for this Great video
+Abdur Rafay You're welcome! Thanks for watching and commenting.
You said (15:34) that you can add upto 12 virtual network adapters to a virtual machine , is there a limitation to the number of Virtual Machines connected to a Virtual adapter ? I understand that it would share the bandwidth and make it slow but what is the recommended number if any ?
BTW your posting is truly fantabulous , appreciate for all you have provided to the IT community - good work !!!
Arun Vijay Hi Arun.
Thanks for commenting. That's an excellent question.
I am not aware of any limits set by Hyper-V on the number of Virtual Machines that can be connected to the same Virtual Switch. Not even Microsoft have acknowledged this in the "Hyper-V Scalability" TechNet Article here: technet.microsoft.com/en-GB/library/jj680093.aspx
As such, I believe the "upper limit" is likely to be determined by your hardware and bandwidth - so you may want to use a 1Gbps network adapter, if possible.
Personally, I am a fan of assigning every Virtual Machine its own dedicated Virtual Switch, assuming you have the hardware to do so. That way, every Virtual Machine has exclusive use of one physical network adapter (just like it would if it were a physical machine).
Glad you enjoyed the video - thanks for watching :-)
Crystal clear introduction and
I like your video...!
@ 15:36 , dont't you mean 12 virtual network adapters on a host?
Thank you so much..great
Teffe from sweden was here
How to share data from 2016 server host to hyper v server 2016?
Perfect
thanks .
😎👍
could you assign a static WAN ip to a particular VM?
Hi Peter
The short answer is: Yes. You can assign static public and private IP addresses to Virtual Machines, if you really wanted too.
Of course, the WAN IP address can only be used if you own it. If you do not own it, it simply won't work.
But the question is why? Public WAN IP addresses are usually assigned to routers. You would normally assign a private LAN IP address to your Virtual Machines and have them sit behind a firewall and router, like any regular computer.
Unless you have a very good reason to do this, I'd strongly discourage it.
Hope this helps.
Thank you will
thanks...
Teffe was here
server2012 is nice
1.25x speed better
OMG your voice is putting me to sleep
Switch off then. Moron.
Oh I did. It's hilarious you're sensitive enough to reply lol.
Great. You did us both a favour then.