Mastering Windows Server 2016 Hyper-V

(Romina) #1
Figure  5.27    Modifying   a   template    within  SCVMM
Figure 5.28 Selecting a template as the source for a new virtual machine
Figure 5.29 Setting a virtual machine to be highly available and therefore
requiring deployment to a cluster
Figure 5.30 The ratings for possible hosts
Figure 5.31 A complete SCVMM VM deployment from a template
Figure 5.32 Registry within a virtual machine showing information about the
host
Figure 5.33 Windows Server 2012 R2 to Windows Server 2016 cluster rolling
upgrade
Figure 5.34 Continued Windows Server 2012 R2 to Windows Server
cluster rolling upgrade

Chapter


Figure  6.1 Adding  a   WSUS    server  to  SCVMM
Figure 6.2 Viewing the compliance details for a noncompliant node
Figure 6.3 Cluster maintenance configuration in Configuration Manager
Figure 6.4 Example view of protection using DPM
Figure 6.5 Checkpoint configuration for a VM
Figure 6.6 A VM with two checkpoints
Figure 6.7 Example of a checkpoint life cycle
Figure 6.8 Update sequence number problems when applying a snapshot to a
domain controller.
Figure 6.9 The default tiering options for a new service template. You’ll see
that a three-tier application is also available if you scroll down.
Figure 6.10 The Service Designer
Figure 6.11 Only 64 processors are visible on the Hyper-V host of an 80-
processor system.
Figure 6.12 A nice view of the key resources for my Hyper-V host using the
report display output type
Figure 6.13 Viewing resource pools in Hyper-V Manager
Figure 6.14 Operations Manager view of virtual machines

Chapter


Figure  7.1 The components  of  a   failover    cluster
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