HyperVServer Build
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@joel said in HyperVServer Build:
@obsolesce haha yes. HV01\Administrator
Can you connect via powershell?
Verify you can ping HV01 by name.
Open up PowerShell on your Win10 PC, and type
Enter-PSSession
, then hit enter.Then enter HV01.
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@obsolesce said in HyperVServer Build:
@joel said in HyperVServer Build:
@obsolesce haha yes. HV01\Administrator
Can you connect via powershell?
Verify you can ping HV01 by name.
Open up PowerShell on your Win10 PC, and type
Enter-PSSession
, then hit enter.Then enter HV01.
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName HV01 -Credential HV01\Administrator
does work. -
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName HV01 -Credential HV01\Administrator does work - yes this does work!
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Its just the connecting via hyper-v manager 'Operation not supported' - So how can I allow remote management on the HV01 host or get my host to support Hyper-V Manager?
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Enter another PSSession to HV01.
Then type
get-service vmms
Does the status say it's running?
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UPDATE: I have run Updates on the host and after a reboot I think i can now connect. It did throw another error about WinRM firewall but it connected - i'll report back after a bit more tetsing
THANKS so far -
Next I want to create a new VM - My Domain Controller.
First, I want to change Hyper-V settings so my VM's go into D:\
- How do I partition the D drive on my host - when i formatted windows I created one partition for (80GB) and left 1.9TB spare (which I want to be my D drive) - How do I bring the D drive online on the host and have it accessible?
Thanks
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@joel said in HyperVServer Build:
Next I want to create a new VM - My Domain Controller.
First, I want to change Hyper-V settings so my VM's go into D:\
- How do I partition the D drive on my host - when i formatted windows I created one partition for (80GB) and left 1.9TB spare (which I want to be my D drive) - How do I bring the D drive online on the host and have it accessible?
Thanks
If you have RSAT installed, you can use Server Manager > File and Storage Services to manage your disks or use Disk Management.
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I'm assuming Disk 0 is your RAID10.
You have a partition setup for 80GB which is your C volume.
Now you need to (on DISK 0), create another VOLUME using the rest of the space and give it the letter D.
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diskpart select disk 0 create partition primary select partition 5 format fs=ntfs label="DATA" quick assign list disk list part list vol
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@obsolesce I don't have to run any firewall powershell commands. The steps I listed above are literally all I need to do. I did this on a server about 10 days ago. Installed perfectly on a Dell R420.
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@joel If you followed the steps I layed out, you HAVE to log in as WSMAN\username where username is the user you setup on the Hyper-V server. I don't know why but without "WSMAN", regardless of the workgroup name, the remote management doesn't work.
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@nashbrydges said in HyperVServer Build:
@obsolesce I don't have to run any firewall powershell commands. The steps I listed above are literally all I need to do. I did this on a server about 10 days ago. Installed perfectly on a Dell R420.
I never mentioned the firewall.
I mentioned in my first response here to make sure the host and management PC are fully up to date.
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@obsolesce Haha, sorry, this was supposed to be a response to Joel's post about firewall powershell. Tagged the wrong person.
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This server build is frustrating...I managed to get the HyperV server installed and able to connect to it via Hyper-V Manager. However when trying to boot the Guest VM via my CDRom (WindowsServer2016)m it tells me the BIOS was locked and the OS was tied to vendor. Note: I was using the original CD that I got shipped with the server!!!
I then tried burning an ISO (generic) to USB but was unable to mount and boot from it as the HyperV Manager couldnt see the USB plugged into the Host! I read about making it 'offline' first but when attempting that, it turns out i couldnt make removable media offline!!
This thing is a nightmare!
Thinking of packing in Hyper-V! -
@joel said in HyperVServer Build:
This server build is frustrating...I managed to get the HyperV server installed and able to connect to it via Hyper-V Manager. However when trying to boot the Guest VM via my CDRom (WindowsServer2016)m it tells me the BIOS was locked and the OS was tied to vendor. Note: I was using the original CD that I got shipped with the server!!!
I then tried burning an ISO (generic) to USB but was unable to mount and boot from it as the HyperV Manager couldnt see the USB plugged into the Host! I read about making it 'offline' first but when attempting that, it turns out i couldnt make removable media offline!!
This thing is a nightmare!
Thinking of packing in Hyper-V!Why don't you just mount the ISO in a virtual cdrom for the VM?
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@joel said in HyperVServer Build:
This server build is frustrating...I managed to get the HyperV server installed and able to connect to it via Hyper-V Manager. However when trying to boot the Guest VM via my CDRom (WindowsServer2016)m it tells me the BIOS was locked and the OS was tied to vendor. Note: I was using the original CD that I got shipped with the server!!!
I then tried burning an ISO (generic) to USB but was unable to mount and boot from it as the HyperV Manager couldnt see the USB plugged into the Host! I read about making it 'offline' first but when attempting that, it turns out i couldnt make removable media offline!!
This thing is a nightmare!
Thinking of packing in Hyper-V!Copy the iso to the server instead.
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Sometimes Hyper-V will puke all over itself when trying to install from network ISO so in most cases, I end up copying the ISO from the remote network folder to a local folder on the Hyper-V server after I've created the network drive.
- Create network drive on Hyper-V server from cmd with
net use z: \\10.10.10.200\some_folder /persistent:yes /user:username "supersecretpassword"
- Create local folder for ISOs on the Hyper-V server from cmd run
mkdir c:\ISO
- Copy the ISO from the network drive to the new ISO folder from cmd with
copy z:\my_iso.iso c:\ISO
If you don't want to keep the mapped network drive, remove it from cmd with
net use z: /delete
The key is to have the ISO locally stored on the Hyper-V server. Once you do, you can use Hyper-V Manager to navigate to the local folder on the Hyper-V server to connect the ISO to use to create the VM.
- Create network drive on Hyper-V server from cmd with