List of Illustrations
Chapter
Figure 1.1 The Device Manager view of a typical physical server, with Task
Manager showing some of its available resources
Figure 1.2 A high-level view of a virtualization host and resources assigned to
virtual machines
Figure 1.3 A virtual machine running on a physical server
Figure 1.4 Hyper-V architecture
Figure 1.5 A high-level view of the Live Migration process
Figure 1.6 Linux virtual machine running on Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V
with 64 vCPUs
Figure 1.7 The major new features of Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V
Figure 1.8 Extended Hyper-V Replica allows different replication intervals
between the replicas
Figure 1.9 Using stacked Standard licenses for virtual machines
Figure 1.10 Moving Standard licenses to enable licensed virtual machine
migrations
Figure 1.11 Required Standard licensing to enable virtual machine mobility
Figure 1.12 Using Datacenter to enable an unlimited number of virtual
machines on the hosts for full mobility
Figure 1.13 Components of System Center
Figure 1.14 The key types of management and how they are owned for the
types of cloud service
Chapter
Figure 2.1 The monolithic and microkernelized hypervisors
Figure 2.2 Task Manager showing a single vmms.exe instance and many vmwp
.exe instances
Figure 2.3 Hyper-V VMBus architecture
Figure 2.4 The BIOS configurations possible for a generation 1 virtual
machine. The boot order can be changed using the Move Up and Move Down
buttons.
Figure 2.5 Adding a SCSI controller to a generation 1 virtual machine
Figure 2.6 Generation 1 compared to generation 2 hardware