Mastering Windows Server 2016 Hyper-V

(Romina) #1
Figure  9.1 Traditional process for requesting  virtual machines    that    is  hands-
on for the administrator
Figure 9.2 Provisioning process when using private cloud
Figure 9.3 All elements of the SCVMM console change based on the current
workspace and selected element of the workspace.
Figure 9.4 On the left is the view for a normal SCVMM administrator, while
on the right is the view for a Replicated Cloud tenant administrator.
Figure 9.5 Specifying the library server for a specific host group
Figure 9.6 Attaching an ISO by using SCVMM from the library
Figure 9.7 Selecting the host group that is available for utilization by the cloud
Figure 9.8 Selecting the logical networks available to the cloud
Figure 9.9 Selecting the storage classifications available to the cloud
Figure 9.10 Configuring the capacity for the cloud
Figure 9.11 Custom capability profile
Figure 9.12 Setting the quotas for a specific tenant
Figure 9.13 A basic Orchestrator runbook
Figure 9.14 Service catalog view in Service Manager of request offerings that
call Orchestrator runbooks
Figure 9.15 Creating a new VM by using Windows Azure Pack's web interface
Figure 9.16 A view of a distributed service and its various services visible
through Operations Manager
Figure 9.17 The Fabric Health dashboard for a SCVMM cloud
Figure 9.18 The core VMs used by Azure Stack in a single-box deployment
with TP1 at top and TP2 at bottom
Figure 9.19 The Azure Stack portal experience

Chapter 10


Figure  10.1    Traditional virtualization-hosting  applications    vs. applications
running in containers
Figure 10.2 Windows Server containers vs. Hyper-V containers
Figure 10.3 Windows Server 2016 container architecture with Docker
Figure 10.4 Container networking with NAT mode
Figure 10.5 Container networking with Transparent mode
Figure 10.6 Container layers
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