Figure 3.34 The SLB implementation of HNVv
Figure 3.35 Security layers with SDNv
Figure 3.36 Example use of the datacenter firewall restricting traffic flow
Figure 3.37 Understanding the VMQ and SR-IOV network technologies
compared to regular networking
Figure 3.38 Enabling SR-IOV on a virtual switch at creation time
Figure 3.39 Ensuring that VMQ is enabled for a virtual machine
Figure 3.40 Network performance without vRSS enabled
Figure 3.41 Network performance with vRSS enabled
Figure 3.42 A nonconverged Hyper-V host configuration with separate 1Gbps
NIC teams for each type of traffic
Figure 3.43 A converged Hyper-V host configuration with a shared NIC team
used
Figure 3.44 A converged Hyper-V host configuration with separate NICs for
SMB (RDMA) traffic
Figure 3.45 A converged Hyper-V host configuration with shared NICs for
SMB (RDMA) traffic
Figure 3.46 Breakdown of features and offloads by type of networking
Figure 3.47 Primary properties for a network adapter
Figure 3.48 VMSwitch network speed shown inside the guest
Figure 3.49 Configuring the remote traffic to capture by using Message
Analyzer
Figure 3.50 Example view of captured traffic
Chapter
Chapter
Figure 4.1 An error occurs as the administrator tries to disable write caching
within a virtual machine. Applications would receive a similar error condition.
Figure 4.2 A virtual machine with 20GB of space unallocated
Figure 4.3 Creating a new virtual disk within a storage space
Figure 4.4 Storage Spaces architecture showing a hot block moving from the
HDD tier to the SSD tier
Figure 4.5 Selecting the resiliency for a 2016 virtual disk
Figure 4.6 High-level view of Storage Spaces Direct utilizing SMB 3 to
aggregate local storage for nodes in a cluster
Figure 4.7 The two types of deployment model for Storage Spaces Direct